Kansas State University - Royal Purple Yearbook (Manhattan, KS)
- Class of 1933
Page 1 of 300
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 300 of the 1933 volume:
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aoyfl], punp:.E THE 9 COPVaXGHT ' ••NKIIN THAtKHf g. tOITOR STfVt V(SfCK«. mAt«D[R ltHtlt|t H« T.TPtASUH£R PRINTED AND BOUND BY JOS D. Havens Co OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE STUDENT BODY OF KANSAS STATE COLLEGE AT MANHATTAN Eoicarion Kansas State Collese, the first state school of higher education established in Kansas, has lived and grown for three score and ten years. The seventieth year of the existence of the college marks the fiftieth year of service that one man has given to this institution. Julius Terrass Willard received his bachelor ' s degree from Kansas State in 1883, and became a faculty member in his alma mater the same year. At the end of a half century of vv ' ork in different instructional and administrative offices, Doctor Willard is vice-president of the college. Because he has fused his personality with that of Kansas State since he was a young student in a college near his own age,- and because he has given his life to the education of students of Kansas, it is appropriate that we dedicate this, the twenty- fifth volume of the Royal Purple, to Dr. J. T. Willard. •. orELUor Collese life is a part oF real life, and a preparation for tfie remainder. May each page of this annual bring you a memory, caught in word or picture. May you recall romance and heartaches; bewildered freshman days,- the thrill of pledge pins and jewelled pins,- the first football game; nights of drudgery; elec- tion to honor societies; formal parties; relief and regrets of commencement. May you remember, too, the world that struggled to rebuild society. May this book suggest realistically and for all time, college days that were yours experiences that made unique the year 1932-33. ontEnts ATHLETICS Book Three ORGANIZATIONS o o k Four ACTIVITIES THE CQI.LEGE ooH une m Wildcat in Winter _i™ „ . %-. i ■M V S ' iJs r- ■...v::;S- li. T C 1 Waters Hall, south front, both wings. Auditorium at night from nortli. i 1. The Pfucize twins have a corner on the cheer leading in Kansas. 2. Eleanor Wright cooling oil. 3. The annual . ' g push- ball game. 4. Chi O ' s practicing for efficient night work. 5. Moreen The 4-H Club Sig Alph. 6. Uberhart alter a long Royal Purple .session. 7. R. L. Joe E. Brown Parker. 8. The . Jam vets during evolution. 9- Front ot Nichols Gym in winter. 10. Who ' s boss . . . What Spud ... is that your petticoat falling again? II. The two Ireshman PanhcUcnic presidents. 1. A take of a Manhattan Theatre play, 2. An ideal love scene by Langston and Ratliff. 3. H. W. Davis who has scored the highlights in Manhattan Theatre plays. 4. Four Al Smiths going through Scarab. 5. Major Van Tuyl and son. 6. Earh- Monday morning. 7. Officials and speaker going to commence- ment exercises. 8. A cozy nook in the S. A. E. house. 9. Now we have most of that white house chapter. 10. Would you please look at those Tri-Delts on perch. 11. Caveman Daniels sweep- ing an Alpha Delt off her icet. 1. The Ags pushing the pushball. 2. Intramural practice for dear Sigma Nu. 3. The three Delt Whizzes in engagements, popularity and athletics. 4. The Chinese flower, Lily Lee. 5. Roscoe helping the Ags hold that pig. 6. The deserted Chi O house during the 3.2 per cent beer opening in K. C. 7. Louise Sklar, the only female vet student. 8. Rosie Nelson smiles while Katherine Reid looks .sophisticated. 9. Is this where the Collegian Rolled Oats column began? 10. Put ' em up to Scotty. 11. The famous Pat Murphy stance. 12. Orin Stoner takes his during K hell week. 13. Bo talks things over with Capt. Zeckscr. 14. Tri-Delts can always walk the straight line. 15. Manhattan in the winter. 1. Lawrence ' s way of entertaining the Pi Phis. 2. Al Wilson after the burro drag. 3- Robertson ' ' the vet. 4. Heralding the Ag Fair. 5. Another vet. 6. Not Kayo MuDins, just 7. Maxwell and his pal. 8. Are you Reddy; Yes, and three other Chi O ' s. 9. Morning and still my Lambda Chi masters aren ' t in. 10. ■Tarzan-- Neville. U. Underwood airing h.s famous base runners. 12. A big sample of K fraternity initiation. 13. A hsh picture of Buck and Pishney. 14. Eight big Betas popped right out of heaven, One got smart and then there were seven. 15. I ' ll pull your teeth out if you let me down, Daniels. 16. The absent minded public speaking professor . . . H. Miles Heberer. 17. Looks as if Kannal has the best hold on Ernestine ... But Steve can ' t have a harem. GOVERNOR ALF. M. LANDON THE GOVERNOR Q.O ' ERNOR LANDON assumes his office in one of the most difficult periods in the historv of the state. The sympathy of the entire state is with him as he tries to cut the expenses of government without forever crippling the effi- ciency of Kansas educational institutions. THE BOARD OF REGENTS ' T ' HE State Board of Regents is composed of men who are willing to take time from their private interests to help guide the progress of the state ' s educational institutions. It shares with the Governor the perplexing problems of todav. The present personnel of the Board of Regents is as follows: C. M. HARGER, Abilene, Chairman DREW McLaughlin, Paoia FRED M. HARRIS, Ottawa LESLIE WALLACE, Larned OSCAR STAUFFER, Arkansas Citv- C. C. WILSON, Meade DUDLEY DOOLITTLE, Strong City BAILEY P. W. WAGGENER, Atchison RALPH T. O ' NEILL, Topeka DR. FRANCIS DAVID FARRELL THE PRESIDENT PRESIDENT FARRELL was born in Smithlkld, Utah, on March 13, 1883. His alma mater is the Utah State Agri- cultural college, from which he was graduated in 1907 with the degree Bachelor of Science. Who ' s Who records the President ' s first job as being a scientific assistant in cereal investigations of the United States Department of Agriculture. In 1910 he accepted an associate professorship in irrigation and drainage at the University of Idaho. After a vear there he resumed his work with the LT. S. D. A., and until 1918 he was concerned in the government ' s irrigation investigaticms and reclamation projects. In 1918 President Farrell came to Manhattan as Dean of the Division of Agriculture and director of the agri- cultural experiment station, a position he held until 1925, when he became President of the college. President Farrell ' s broad knowledge of student problems as well as his abilit ' as an educator ha e made him a popular and worthy President. VICE-PRESIDENT TNOCTOR WILLARD has been ' ice-President of the College since 1918, and was Dean of the Division of General Science from 1909 until 1930. He has served the college in various capac- ities from assistant instructor to his present position since 1883. J. T, WILLARD REGISTRAR TN SEPTEMBER, 1913, after serving for three years as assistant to George O. Foster, Registrar of the University of Kansas, Miss Machir came to Manhattan to assume the duties of Regis- trar at Kansas State College JESSIE McDowell machir DEAN OF AGRICULTURE TN 1873, a farmer ' s course, forerunner of what is now the division of agriculture, was established. About 1897, the farmer ' s course was changed to the agricultural course and as a result the graduates in agriculture are numbered from 1900. Dean Call has been with the College since 1907 when he accepted a position as assistant in agronomy. He became Dean of the Division of Agriculture and Director of the Agricultural Experiment Station in 1925. Assistant Dean Hugh Durham ably assists Dean Call in his work. L. E. CALL DEAN OF ENGINEERING A LTHOUGH the Division of Engineering under that name dates back only to 1917, engineering has been one of the fundamental branches of instruction of this college since it was established. Mr. Seaton has been at Kansas State College almost continually since he took his Bachelor of Science degree in 1904. He assumed the duties of the Dean of the Division of Engineering and Director of the Engineering Experiment Station in 1920. R. A. SEATON DEAN OF GENERAL SCIENCE n HE Division of General Science was founded in 1909 during the administration of President H.J. Waters. Dr. J. T. Willard was the first dean, and continued in that capacity until July 1, 1930, when he was succeeded bv Rodnev W. Babcock, present head of the division. Prof. C. M. Correll, of the Department of History and Government, IS Assistant Dean, and Miss Alice M. Melton, Assistant to the Dean! Mrs. W. J. Burtis is the lady whose smile first greets one on entering the office. She, too, assists with the Dean ' s work. R. W. BABCOCK DEAN OF HOME ECONOMICS QENUINE home-making is an exceedinglv difficult and supremelv important undertaking. It is a business, a science, and an art. It IS the greatest of all the professions. Dean Margaret M. Justin and the teaching staff of the division find inspiration and responsibility in the professional instruction of the large number of young women, most of whom will be the home-makers of the future. MARGARET M. JUSTIN DEAN OF VETERINARY MEDICINE T) ALPH R. DYKSTRA came to this country from Croningen, Netherlands, in 1881, when he was two years of age. He now holds one of the most important positions in his adopted profession . . . President of the American ' eterinary Medical Association. Doctor Dykstra became Dean of the Division of eterinary Medi- cine in 1919 after having served as head of the department before its organization as a division. R, R DYKSTRA DEAN OF THE DIVISION OF GRADUATE STUDY Y T ' HEN the Division of Graduate Study was organized in the spring of 1932, Doctor Ackert was the logical man for the deanship. He had served for years as director of graduate study and adviser to gradu- ate students. Since he came to Kansas State m 1913 as assistant professor of zoology and agricultural experiment station parasitologist, Doctor Ackert has brought distinction 10 the college by his research and his publications. In 1927, and again in 1930 during his sabbatical leave, he was invited to speak at the World ' s Poultry Conference, and on both occasions made notable addresses. In 1930 he was an official delegate of the American Society of Parasitologists to the Eleventh International Zoology Congress. JAMF.S E. ACKliRT DEAN OF THE SUMMER SCHOOL ' X ' HE Summer School was organized in 1911. The chief administrative officer was the Director of the Summer School, a title which, in 1918, was changed to Dean of the Summer School. This change gave the Summer School the same rank as other divisions of the College, with a seat in the Council of Deans, and a separate budget. Beginning with the summer of 1927, formal commencement exercises have been held at the end of the summer session. t£. L. HOLTON DEAN OF EXTENSION r pROM January 1, 1910, to June 30 of the same year, Mr. Umberger was Acting Director of Extension and on July 1 he became director of the work, a position which he now holds as Dean of the Extension Division. The Division of Extension carries on far-reaching work in institutes and extension schools, through county agents, home eco- nomics, home demonstration agents, boys ' and girls ' 4-H clubs, rural engineering, and home study courses. . UMBERGER DEAN OF WOMEN TN 1908 Mrs. Van Zile came to the Kansas State Agricultural College as a professor of domestic science. The following vear she was made Dean of Home Economics when the college was re-organized into divisions. In connection with this office she was made Dean ot Women in 1912 and in 1919 the duties of this office became great enough to require all her time, so that she gave the Home Economics Division into other hands and since has served the college as Dean of Women. She has also obtained a Bachelor of Science degree from this institution, in addition to her other work. MAR ' PIERCE VAN ZILE ADVISER TO MEN TNOCTOR HOLTZ has been Secretary of the Y. iVI. C. A. since 1919, when he left the army. In the spring of 1920 he was given the official title, Adviser to Men and Secretary of the Y. M. C. A. DR A. A, 1 lULlZ STUDENT COUNCIL ' T ' HE council, executive group of the Student Governing Association acts officially upon routine matters of student activity and upon questions of discipline in coordination with the Faculty Council on Student Affairs and the President of the college. Upon payment of the live dollar activity fee at the beginning of each semester, every student becomes a member of the association and is en- titled to a vote in that body. Members of the council are elected each April for the following year. Nominations for councillors are made by getting twenty-five endorsees for each person desiring nomination. From these nominees a ballot is made and presented for the vote of S. G. A. members. The seven candidates receiving the highest number of votes are declared elected. These seven elect from their own number the officers of the council. Maurice L. DuMars, Esther Row, Hal McCord, R. J. Alexander, Ruth Stiles, E. S. Sullivan, and Glenn Fox were the council members for 1932-1933. RADIO T3 ADIO Station K S A C was established December 1, 1924. Since that time this messenger of education has been con- stantly serving Kansas people. L. L. Longsdorf, Extension Editor and Radio Program Director, came to Kansas State in 1927. PUBLICITY L. L. LONGSDORF F. E. CHARLES and R. I. Thackrey handle college news, sports, and features for newspapers. Prof. H. W. Davis and Fred Seaton are known for their participation in announcing radio programs over Station K S A C. R I TH.M KREY F. E. CHARLES ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS R. J. Barnett, ' 95, President, Manhattan Edgar A. Allen, ' 87, Vice-President, Raymore, Mo. W. E. Grimes, ' 13, Treasurer, Manhattan H. Uniberger, ' 05, Secretary, Manhattan Mame (Alexander) Boyd, ' 02, Phillipsburg C. E. Friend, ' 88, Lawrence H. W. Avery, ' 91, Wakefield R. A. Seaton, ' 04, Manhattan C. E. Coburn, ' 91, Kansas City, Kansas ADVISORY COUNCIL Daisy (Hoffman) Johntz, ' 00, Abilene Cliff J. Stratton, ' 11, Topeka Charles Shaver, ' 15, Salina Loren Lupfer, ' 17, Larned Ed Hodgson, ' 03, Little River L ENNEY L. FORD entered Kansas State College in 1916 at the age of twenty. In the spring of his freshman year he volunteered for U. S. Army service in the World War. He saw sixteen months of active service in France. In 1921 Mr. Ford reentered school and graduated in 1924. After graduating he taught school at Norton, Kansas for four years. In 1928 he accepted the position of Alumni Secretary at Kansas State. Mr. Ford is a member of Acacia, Alpha Zeta, and Phi Delta Kappa fraternities. .itA ' feirr-. SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS L. R. Daniels --. ' -..... „ , , ' -----..- Frcsldtllt Robert A. Zeboid - - . . ,, „ , V!ce-tres:atiit John Meyers ----,•■- -i ... . _ t ■-----.--_ Treasurer Gaylord Munson . - - Secretary E. O. Merkley • i,. . Marshal Harold Kugier -4- - - - ' n . ,r j ■f uevot:onal Leader ABMEYER, ERWIN Grantville Hortn-ultwe Alpha Zetaj Gamma Sigma Delta; Hort. Club (Sec ' v-Treas., Prcs.); Apple Judging Team (3 ' ); Ag. Student Staff (4). ALCORN, L. M. ' etcn, • Midia Manhattan Independence, Mo ALEXANDER, ROBERT Architectural Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sigma Tau; Steel Ring, Engineering Association; Gargoyle Club (Pres.); Friars; Student Council (Treas.); Engineers ' Open House (Mgr); Kansas State Engineer (Ass ' t Editor), Roval Purple Board. ALLEN, GAYLE D. Jr. A. V. M. A. AMOS, JULIANA Shelton, Neb. Manhattan Musk Education Pi Beta Phi; Mu Phi Epsilon; Fr. Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; Prix; Orchesis; Y. W. C. A.; Fr. Commission, Chorus, Glee Club, V. A. A.; Purple Pepsters. ANDERSON, HAROLD L. Industrial Chemistry Scabbard and Blade. Manhattan Muscatine, Ia. ANGERER, WILLIAM JOSEPH Veterinary Medicine Jr. A. V. M. a. (Vice-Pres., 3), Newman Club. ANTRIM, ETHEL MARIE Spivey Home Economics Clovia; Collegiate 4-H Club; Kappa Phi; Y. W. C. A., Big Sister Captain; Home Economics Club (Treas.). ASPELIN, MILDRED Dwight General Science Beta Phi Alpha; Y. W. C. A.; Bethany College (1-2); Mathe- matics Club (1-2); Peperettas (1-2); Honor Basketball (3), Honor Baseball (3); Class Tennis Team (3); Class Basketball Team (3); Class Baseball (3). ASTLE, LA FAUN Hutchinson Industrial Journalism Theta Sigma Phi, Sigma Delta Chi Scholarship Recognition; Hutchinson Junior College (1); Y. W. C. A. (G. R. Training Course Chmn., 4), Wesley Founda- tion (Pub. Chmn, 4); Kappa Phi (Religious Efforts, 3); Candle Beam Reporter (4); ATTWOOD, ARTHUR Manhattan Industrial Chemistry Alpha Tau Omega. AVERY, HERBERT W. Wakefield Veterinary Medicine Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Manhattan Theater (Business Mgr., 3). BABBITT, WALTER W. Wi Hamilton (Treas., 4); Collegiate 4-H Club; Who ' s Whoot Staff; Dairy Club; Ag. Association; Freshman Commission; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Baseball (4). BACON, LEWIS H. Sylvan Grove Agriculture Delta Sigma Phi, Collegiate 4-H Club, Klod and Kernel Klub. BEARD, MILDRED E. MiPherson Music Education Pi Beta Phi, Glee Club; Chorus; Women ' s Intranuirals. BELLINGER, P. ANNE Manhattan General Science Newman Club; Chi Omega Sociology Award (4). BENJAMIN, KENNETH U. Deer held Electrical Engineering Sigma Phi Epsilon (Pres., 4); Steel Ring (Pres.), Pi Epsilon Pi (Pres.;), Friars (Vice-Pres.); Scabbard and Blade; St. Pat; Engineering .Associa- tion (Treas.); A. I. E. E. (Treas.); Kansas State Engineer (3-4, Business Mgr., 4); Engineers ' Open House Committee (3-4); Engineering Council (4); R. O. T. C. (First Lieut., 4); Freshman Wrestling. BEST, ROY W. Wkhita Mechanical Engineering Sigma Nu; Sigma Tau; A. S. M. E.; Kansas State Engineer Depart- mental Editor; Engineering Open House Committee. BICKFORD, MAX W. Philupsburo Gciici-a! Science Delta Tau Delta, Glee Club, Chorus; Y. M. C. A. BIERMAN, MARGARET Kensington Home Economics Zcta Tau Alpha; Y. C. A., Margaret Justin Home Economics Club; Kappa Beta, Enchiladas. BLACKBURN, LOREN Veterinary Medicin Ma BLAND. HAZLE G. rden Citv Home Economics Zeta Tau Alpha, Enchiladas. BLANKENSHIP, MAXINE Downs Home Economics Chi Omet;a, Home Economics Cluh, Aggie Pop (3-4), Frivol (1-2-3); Enchiladas. riTTSBURG CuMBERL.AND, low. ' BOGLE, E. ' ERLE Ciri! Engineer Tau Kappa Epsilon, . S. C. E. BOND, THOMAS L. I ' etennM-y Meiiiane Alpha Gamma Rho.Jr. A. V. M. A.; T. S. L.; Pax. BOWMAN, DONALD H. M.anh. tt.an. Agncuhmc iAgronomy Aggie Knights (Prcs.), Tri-K, Campus Chest Conmiittee. BOYD, F. W. Phillipsburg Industrial Journalism Phi Delta Thcta, Baseball Letter; Basketball Captain-elect. BOZARTH, F. M. Acacia. BRADLEY, HELEN Agricultural Engineering Sed, n Home Economics Delta Delta Delta; Home Economics Club; Y. V. C. A., Southwestern College (1-2); Women ' s Intramurals. BRADLEY, VIRGIL E. Belle Plaine Cii ' il Engineering Theta Xi, BRANDENBURG, FRANK ROBERT Agricultural Administration Phi Kappa Tau, Ag. Economics Club; Ag Fair (Treas., 4). BREWER, VEVA Industrial Journalim, Theta Sigma Phi; Quill Club; Y. W. C. A. BROOKSHIER, MARY BROWN, L. EDWIN Acacia. BRUNKE, ALLEN V. Home Economics Industrial Chemistry Veterinary Medicine BUIKSTRA, B. H. C vKER City BURGERT, KENNETH C. Tau Kappa Epsilon. EUitnccd Hngtmoing CAMPBELL, MARCINE D. Hollis Physiciil Education Beta Phi Alpha; Prix (3); W. A. A.; W. A. A, Council; Women ' s K Fraternity; Hockev Team (1-2); Honorary Hockey (1); Swimming Team (l);Volleyba!l (2-3-4); Basketball (4); Archery C3); Baseball (2-3). CASPER, MARJORIE Howe Economics CAVIN, VICTOR C. LaCrosse Mechanical Engineering Phi Sigma Kappa; Sigma Tau; A. S. M. E.; Engineers ' Open House Committee. CHALFANT, LOUISE H. Wichita General Science Mortar Board (Pres.); Kappa Beta (Treas., 3, Pres., 4, Pledge Capt., 1); Eurodelphian (Pres., 3, Vice-Pres., 2); Y. W. C. A. (2-3-4); Cabinet (3-4); Cosmopolitan Club (3-4, Pres., 4). CHILSON, LESTER Oberlin Agriculture (Agronomy) Farm House; Klod and Kernel Klub, Y. M. C. A.; Grain Judging Team (4). CHRISTENSEN, BLANCH L. Bushong Howe Economics Alpha Beta; Y. W. C. A.; Home Economics Club; Chairman of Student Forums (1932-33). CHRISTY, DONALD Alpha Kappa Lambda Agricultural Engineering ScoTT City CLARK, MARY LOU Burr Oak Physical Education Alpha Delta Pi; Mortar Board; Pi Kappa Delta; Enchiladas. CLUTTER, HERBERT W. Earned Agriculture Farm Bouse Fraternity; Alpha Zeta (Scribe); Klod and Kernel Klub (Pres., 4); Y. M. C. A.; Gamma Sigma Delta; Grain Judging Team (4); Agricultural Student (Ass ' t Editor, 3); President Collegiate 4-H Club (4), Delegate to American Country Life Ass ' n in Iowa (3); Who ' s Whoot StafF (2-3-4); Fresh- man Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; 4-H Radio Announcer. COHORST, RAYMOND M arysville Agriculture {Dairy Production) Dairy Club (Vice-Pres., 4). COLLIER, GEORGE R. Colwich Electrical Engineering Phi Kappa Tau; Sigma Tau; Mortar and Ball; Alpha Beta Literary Society; Scarab; Tobasco. COLWELL, WARD E. Onaga Industrial Journalism Lambda Chi Alpha; Sigma Delta Chi; Scarab; Kansas State Collegian Staff (Ass ' t Editor, 3, Editor, 4); Royal Purple Staff (Humor Editor, 3); Sr. Men ' s Panhellenic; College Band (1-2); University of Denver (1). CONGER, WILMER I. Ionia Veterinary Medicine Jr. A. V. M. A. CONRAD, RALPH M. Manhattan Industrial Chemistry Dynamis (Pres., 3); Phi Lambda Unsiion; Hamilton Literary Society; Wesley Foundation Council (3-4, Pres., 4), Y. M. C. A. Board (4); Wrestling (1-2-3); Freshman Numeral. COPENHAFER, LLOYD MARION Agriculture {Landscape Gardening) Horticulture Club (Pres,, 4); Poponoe Entomological Club. Manhattan CORRIGAN, JAMES D. } Commerce Phi Kappa; Pa. ; Scarab; Scabbard and Blade; Newman Club lOLYROOD CORY, SAM p. Theta Xi. Civil Engineering Page S7 COTTRELL, G. F. Augusta Vtterinary Medicine Jr. A. X. M. A.; Glee Club (1); Intramural Baseball (2-3-4). COWDERY, GERTRUDE Lyons General Science Pi Beta Phi, Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Alpha Mu; Y. W. C. A ; W. A. A.; Dvnamis, Hockey (1-2); Extempore Speaking Contest (2). CRAWFORD, MARY ELIZABETH Madison Home Economics Phi Kappa Phi; Omicron Nu (Vice-Pres.); Mortar Board; Mar- garet Justin Home Economics Club (Vice-Pres., 3; Pres., 4); Y. W. C. A.; Orchesis, Ionian Literary Society; Kappa Beta, Delegate to National Meeting of American Home Economics Association (3), Women ' s Rifle Team (3). CRIBBETT, ROMAYNE Industrial Chemistry CRINER, EDWARD E. Wichita Commerce Alpha Tau Omega, Scabbard and Blade, Freshman Men ' s Panhellenic Council, Senior Men ' s Panhellenic Council (Pres., 4), Freshman His- torian; Sophomore Historian. CROCKER, MARIAN Manhattan Industrial Journalism Chi Omega. CROSSEN, GEORGE R. Mechanical Enl ineering Alpha Rho Chi, Pi Epsilon Pi. CUNNINGHAM, ISABEL Newman Club. CURRY, RAY Industrial Journalism Salina DAILY, HAROLD A. Waverly Agriculture Block and Bridle Club; Y, M. C A. DALE, WILLIAM Guyman, Okla. Mechanical Engineering Sigma Phi Epsilon. DANIELS, LAURENCE R. St. Francis Agriculture Sigma Phi Epsilon; Block and Bridle (Trcas.); Pax (Treas.) Scarab (Vice-Pres.); K Fraternity; Senior Class President Manager Junior-Senior Prom; Junior Livestock Judging Team Senior Livestock Judging Team; Meats Judging Team, Freshman Football and Track, Cross Country Letter (2); Track Letter (2). DANIELS, RICHARD P. DANIELSON, ROY Electrical Engineering Electrical Engi, DAVIS, HELEN Home Economics and Art Alpha Xi Delta, Enchiladas. TOPEKA TOPEKA ToPEKA DAMS, WILLIAM DcO. Dynamis. DECKER, PHARES Farm House. Mechanical Engineering Agriculture DENISON, HAROLD M. Electrical Engineering Theta Xi; A. I. E. E. ToPBKA DENTON, ORVILLE FREDERICK Denton Agricultural Economics Alpha Zeta, Gamma Sigma Delta; Webster Literary Society (Pres., 4), Inter- Society Council; American Bankers ' Ass ' n Foundation Scholarship Award (3); Agricultural Economics Club (Pres., 4); Agricultural Student Staff; Dairy Livestock- Judging Team (4); Phi Kappa Phi. DOBSON, EDITH Manhatt.an Industrial Journalism Theta Sigma Phi (Scc ' y, 4); Collegian Staff (Feature Editor, 2; Ass ' t Editor, 2; Ass ' t Business Mgr., 2; Editor, 3); Collegian Board (3-4); Royal Purple Feature Editor (2), DORGAN, ESTHER Alta Vista General Science Delta Zeta; Kappa Phi; Ionian Literary Socictv; Y. W. C. A., (Cabinet 2-3); Dramatic Chairman Weslev Foundation; Varsitv Debate (3-4). DOUBRAVA, JOSEPH A. Lorraine Cit tl Engineering Tau Kappa Epsilon. DOWNIE, ROBERTA Garden City General Science Chi Omega. DuMARS, MAURICE Agra Industrial Journalism Sigma Phi Epsilon; Student Council (Pres.), Sigma Delta Chi (Pres. 2 years); Friars; Scarab; Collegian Board; Sophomore Class Historian; K. S. A. C. News Announcer 1 yr.; College Reporter Mercury-Chronicle (2 yrs.); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Collegian Sports Editor, 1 semester. EBERHART, ETHEL Topeka Architecture Beta Phi Alpha; Phi Kappa Phi; Mortar Board; Prix; Dynamis; Tau Epsilon Kappa (Sec ' y-Treas., 4); Women ' s Engineering Ass ' n; W. A. A.; Gargoyle Club; Enchiladas; Royal Purple Staff (2-3-4; Sec ' y-Treas., 4); Chorus(3); Fresh- man Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; Sophomore Honors; Fr. Architectural Prize; Sigma Tau Medal. EBERLE, R. E. Emporia Civil Engineering A. S. C. E EBLING, EUGENIA Lindsborg Industrial Journalism Pi Beta Phi; Theta Sigma Phi; ' W. A. A.; Purple Pepsters; Jr. Class ' Vice-President; Aggie Pop (2); Aggie Pop Committee (3); Frivol (2); Ag Orpheum (T), College Siste ' r Captain (3), Collegian Staff. EKDAHL, KENNETH J. Manhattan Commerce Y. M. C. a. (3-4). EKDAHL, OSCAR S. Manhattan Architecture Alpha Rho Chi; Sigma Tau; Gargoyle Club; Pi Epsilon Pi; T. S. L.; Kansas State Engineer Staff (2); Kansas State Engineer Board (4); Open House Committee (3-4). ELDER, MARGARET VIRGINIA Hutchinson Home Economics Alpha Delta Pi; Enchiladas; Glee Club (3), Choral Ensemble Passion Play (2); Purple Pepsters; W. A. A.; Y. W. C. A., Home Economics Club; Freshman Women ' s Panhellenic; Class Base- ball (2); Mixed Chorus (2). ELLIS, GENE Council Grove Civil Engineering Pi Kappa Alpha; Scarab. ELSER, LOUIS GARNER Fort Riley Civil Engineering Alpha Tau Omega. ELSON, ANDREW C. Kans.as City Landscape Gardening Alpha Gamma Rho; Alpha Zeta; Horticultural Club (Sec ' y- Treas., 3); Freshman Men ' s Panhellenic. Top LNCiLLR, ROY W. Chemical Engineering Kappa Sigma; Chemical Club (3-4). ERHART, ANDREW B. L.vrned Agriculture ( A ronomy) Phi Kanpa Phi; Alpha Zeta; Tri K; Gamma Sigma Delta; Ag. Student Staff (4); Grain Judging Team (4); Mgr. Students Crop Judging Contest (4); Freshman Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; Sophomore Honors. EVERS, ROBERT A. Quincy, III. General Science Phi Delta Kappa; American Ass ' n for the . ' Vdvanccment of Science; Kansas Academy of Science; Eugenics Research Ass ' n; Student- Faculty Forum Committee. EYCHNER, ROBERT C. Civil Eiigii ring FAIRBANK, PAUL E. Topeka Physical Education Beta Theta Pi; K Fraternity; Student Council; President Sophomore Class; President Freshman Class; Business Manager Aggie Orpheum ( ' 33); Manager Parents ' Dav ( ' 32); Football (2-3-4); Basketball (2-3-4); Baseball i:3-4). FINKE, ELMER F. I ' etmnary Medicin Jr. A. V. M. A.; Phi Kappa Phi. R, Mo. FIRTH. L. K. CowGiLL, Mo. Veterinaiy Medicine Alpha Gamma Rho; Friars; Freshman Men ' s Panhellenic; Senior Men ' s Pan- hellenic, T. S, L.; Pa.x, Jr. A. V. M. A.; Advanced R. O. T. C; Y. M. C. A. FLORELL, JOHN S. Archirectiire Phi Kappa. FOCKELE, FRANCES ANN Muftc Edncatimi Chi Omega; Girls ' Glee Club, College Cho Pop; Aggie Orpheum. FOCKELE, MAX Commerce Pi Kappa Alpha. FOX, GLENN S. M. NH.ATTAN LeRoy ; Enchiladas, .Aggie ROZEL Agronomy Farm House; Alpha Zeta (Chancellor); Gamma Sigma Delta; Wampus Cats; Klod and Kernel Klub, Poponoe Entomological Club; Y. M. C. A.; Junior Class Treasurer; Student Council (Vice-Pres.); Grain Judging Team (4); Men ' s Glee Club (2-3-4). FRENCH, HOMER Pretty Prairie General Science Delta Tau Delta. FREY, BEULAH M. Elmdale Howe Economics Clovia; Y. V. C. .A.; Margaret Justin Home Economics Club; Kappa Phi (Sec ' y, 4); Tenniquoit Team (4); Collegiate 4-H Club. GANSTROM, HARRY W. Concordia Architecture Phi Kappa Tau; Gargoyle Club (Sec ' y, 4); Freshman Commission; Phi Kappa Phi; Freshman Flonors; Engineers ' Open House (4); Easy Come, Easv Go. GARD, MARGARET Chi Omega. Kansas City, Mo. GARRISON, LEONARD E. Manchester General Science Sigma Nu; Scabbard and Blade fVice-Pres.); Friars; T. S. L. ; Beauvais; Cadet Major R. O. T. C. GASTON, ELIZABETH Manhattan Induitrtal Journalism Alpha Omicron Pi (U. of Pa.); Theta Sigma Phi; Collegian Staff. GERAGHTY, BERNARD K. Selden Electrical Engineering Lambda Chi Alpha; A. L E. E.; Hamilton Literarv Society; Newman Club; College Orchestra; Panhellenic, Bo-xing. GILSON, HARRIET C. Manhattan General Science Kappa Kappa Gamma. GRAHAM, LUELLA Topeka General Science Chi Omega; Washburn College (l-2);Glee Club (3-4); Orchesis, (Sec ' y, 4); Ag. Queen; Y. W. C. A.; Chorus (3); Aggie Pop (3-4). GRASS, GERALDINE LaCrosse Commerce Chi Omega; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet ( ' 33); Freshman Women ' s Panhellenic; W. A. A. GUMP, ROBERT H. Abilene Veterinary Mtdicnif Phi Sigma Kappa, K Fraternity; jr. A. V. M. A., Freshman Wrestling, Freshman Football, Varsity Football (2-3); Varsity Baseball U). GURTLER, ALBERTA Topeka Diititics jnd Institutional Economia Delta Delta Delta; Y. W. C. A.; Margaret Justin Home Economics Club; W. A. A. HADLEY, ARTHUR CARROLL Oklahoma City, Okla. Archttectiin Gargoyle Club; Freshman Class President; Summer School Pageant ( ' 30); Intramural Letter (2-3-4). HADSELL, DOROTHA Delta Delta Delta. HAHN, LELA MAE Manhatta ;;, , J Journal n Glen Elder Cotmnerce Delta Delta Delta; Ionian Literary Society; Chorus (4); Glee Club (4), Y. W. C. A.; W. A. A.;Sociology Award (3); Aggie Pop (4); Aggie Orphcum (4), Volley Ball; Tenniquoit. HALL, LYMAN MONROE Downers Grove, III. Commmt Pi Kappa Alpha, Alpha Kappa Psi, Pi Epsilon Pi, T. S. L.; Pax; Scarab; Subway Express; Broadway; The Spider; Fresh- man Football Numeral. HALL, MABEL LILLIAN Kensington General Science Alpha Beta Literary Society (Sec ' y, 2, Ass ' t Marshal, 3); Y. W. C, A. HALL, T. E. Phi Lambda Theta. Agncult,, Salina HAMMOND, BERNARD EUGENE Electrical Engiiieering Mortar and Ball (Treas., 3); A. I. E. E. (Sec ' y, 4); Captain R. O. T. C. HAMON, JOHN Valley Falls Agronomy Alpha Kappa Lambda; Franklin Literarv Society (Pres., 4); Collegiate 4-H Club; Klod and Kernel Klub; Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; College Band (T-2-3); Y. M. C. A. HARGER, O. A. Manhattan Electrical Engineering Sigma Tau; Phi Kappa Phi; Engineers ' Open House Committee. HARPER, RAYMOND T. Manhattan Poultry Husbandry Poultry Judging Team (4); Ag. Student Staff. HASLER, HARRY L. Oklahoma City, Okla. Physical Education Sigma Nu (Pres.); Scarab; Pax; K Fraternity; Beauvais; Intramural Manag er, Junior Class President; Football (1-2-3), Basketball (1-2-3); Baseball (2). ' HAUPT, JAMES W. Newton Mechanical Engineering Sigma Tau; Band (3-4); Engineers ' Open House Committee (4). HAYMOND, MERLE PRESTON Burdett Industrial Chemistry Phi Lambda Upsilon, Men ' s Glee Club; Chorus; College Band (3). HEBERT, ACHILLE CHARLES Langston, Okla. Electrical Engineering Interracial Group; Cosmopolitan Club, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. HEDGE, IVALEE Manhattan Home Economics Alpha Xi Delta; Omicron Nu (Pres.); Enchiladas (Pres.); Kappa Beta; Orchestra; Senior Women ' s Panhellenic; Y. W. C. A.; Margaret Justin Home Economics Club (Sec ' y); W. A. A.; Intramurals. HEFFELFINGER, BETTY Industrial Journalis. Delta Delta Delta. Newton HEIMERICH, JOHN J. Clay Ce er Architectural Engineering Gargoyle Club. HENNEY, MARIE Hutchinson Industrial Journalism Kappa Delta; Theta Sigma Phi; Theta Pi; Y. W. C. A Glee Club ' Chorus;Frivol(3); Collegian Staff ::3); ■■Aggie Pop- (3); ■' Agsie Pop ' Committee f4 . HERZIG, FRANCES LARSON Howe Economics Beta Phi Abha. Manhattan HINCHCLIFF, KEITH KBNs.NaTOK Architecture Sigma Tau; Aggie Knights; Alpha Beta Literarv Society; Gargoyle Club- College Orchestra; . M. C. A.; World Forum Committee ;3)f Engineers ■Open House Committee [4].. ' HINKLE, THOMAS C, Jr. Carbonbale Entomology Poponoe Entomological Club. HOBSON, ESTHER Kinoman Physical Education W. A. A ; Purple Pepsters; Women ' s K Fraternity, Frog Club (Pres., 4); Hockey (1); Volleyball (1-3), Basketball ri-3)- Swimming (1-2-3); Baseball (1-2-3); Track (1-2-3); Tenniquo.t (3); Intramural Tennis Champion (4). HOBSON, EUGENE Acacia. Agricultural Engineering HOENER, LAWRENCE C. Mechanical Engineering ATCHIS0 Preston Kans. s City HOLLIDAY, CARL E. Commerce Kappa Sigma; Freshman Panhellenic (Vice-Pres. Kansas City Kansas, Junior College (1); Football (1). HOLM, HARVEY Dwight Agricultural Administration Phi Lambda Theta; Sr. Men s Panhellenic. HOLTON, MARY Manhattan Home Economics Pi Beta Phi; Omicron Nu (Sec ' y); Phi Kappa Phi; Margaret Justin Home Economics Club; Dynamis (Sec ' y); Enchiladas. HONSTEAD, G. L. HOOK, Z. WAYNE Genera Manhattan Theater. HORCHE.M, OTIS ( Phi Delta Theta. HORNER, SEWARD E. Waterville lANHATTAN al Science HOUSER, MARY Industrial Journalism Kappa Kappa Gamma, Royal Purple Board (3-4). HOWARD, CLAIR L. Civil Engineering , 3), Mortar and Ball. A. S. C. E. ;Sec HUDSON, CLAUDE Jr. A. V. M. A. Veterinary Medicine WoosTER, Ohio Gothenburg, Neb HUDSON, H. K. Manhattan I ' ttrnthiry Medicine Phi Kappa Phi; Gamma Sigma Delta. HUGHES, RAYMOND H. Manhattan Gemra! Science Hamilton Literary Society (Vice-Pres., 4); Intersociety Council (Pres., 4); Freshman Commission, Y. M, C. A. (7); Freshman Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; Sophomore Honors. HUNTER, JAMES V. Klod and Kernel Klub. Ma JACK, FRANCES M. Russell Music Education Delta Delta Delta; Mu Phi Epsilon fPres., 4); Mortar Board; Prix; Sr. Women ' s Panhellenic (Pres., 3); W. A. A.; Purple Pepster; Chorus; Glee Club; Y. W. C. A.; Enchiladas; Rifle Team C2); Aggie Pop (2-3); Ag. Orpheum (2-3-4:); Frivol (2-3); Mikado (4); Phi Kappa Phi. JACK, ROBERTA Russell Home Economics and Art Delta Delta Delta; Omicron Nu; Mortar Board; Enchiladas; Home Economics Club; Chorus; Glee Club; Aggie Pop (2-3); Aggie Orpheum (3-4); Y. W. C. A.; W. A. A., Purple Pepster. JENICEK, PAUL V. BusHTON Agricultural Engineering Sigma Tau; Steel Ring; Kansas State Engineer Staff; Engineers ' Open House Committee (4), A. S. A. E. (Vice-Pres., 3-4). JENNINGS, REX M. Delta Tau Delta. JOHNSON, IRVING M HovT Smolan Electrical Engineering Phi Lambda Theta; Athenian Literary Societv; A. I. E. E.; L. S. A. A. JOHNSTON, DONALD R. Manhattan Commerce Tau Kappa Epsilon; Scabbard and Blade; Manhattan Theater (5 Major Productions); Advanced R. O. T. C; Cadet Captain (4); Rifle Team (Captain, 4). Ho, JONES, FLORENCE Chi Omega. JURDEN, RICHARD H ElDorado Kansas Citv, Mo. I ' eterinary Medicine Jr. A. V. M. A.; Y. M, C, A,, R, 6, T. C. Captain; Wise Club. KASTNER, MANUEL C. Manhattan I eterinary Medicine Theta Xi; Pi Epsilon Pi, Jr. A, V, M. A.; College Band, Y. M. C. A.;R. O. T. C. KECK, CLETA Manhattan General Science Kappa Phi; Y. W. C. A.; Margaret Justin Home Economics Club; Girl Reserve Leadership Certificate; Kansas Club; Colorado University; Arkansas Citv junior College; Southwestern College, A. B. Degree; Graduate Work at Colorado University, Boulder. KECK, MARTIN F. Kans.ns Citv, Mo. Floriculture Delta Sigma Phi; Horticulture Club; Manhattan Theater Plavs. KEEGAN, ELIZABETH Great Bend General Science Eurodelphian Literary Society (Vice-Pres.); Quill Club; Y. W. C. A. KELLER, SYLVESTER H, Newton Agricultural Engineering Alpha Kappa Lambda; Steel Ring, A. S. A. E. (Treas., 3, Sec ' y, 4); Engineers ' Open House Committee (3-4); Varsity Wrestling Squad (3-4). WlNKIELD KELLEY, MARGARET Kappa Kappa (iamma. Home Economics KENNEDY, FLOYDE N. Architectural Engineering Alpha RhoChi. KESLER, JOEL P. Ovehbeook Electrical Enj itieenng Delta TaQ Delta, Sigma Tau (Treas., 4); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet ( ' 2-3-4, Vice-Pres., 3), Kansas State Engineer Staff (3-4); A. I. E. E. (Sec ' v-Treas!, 3, Marshal, 4); Men ' s Glee Club (2-3-4, Vice-Pres., 3, Pres., 4), The Ivory Door, (2), Engi- neers ' Open House Committee (4). KIM, YUN SUH Shanghai, China Hmticu tun- Hort. Club, Y. M. C. A., Cosmopolitan Club, Apple Judging Team. KISTLER, RUTH VERA Kingman Home Economics Browning Literary Society (Sec ' y, 2, Treas., 3); Margaret Justin Home Economics Club; Hospitality Week Committee (3-4); Collegiate 4-H Club; Y. W. C. A. (2). KNERR, MARGARET MARIE Manhattan Horticultnre Kappa Phi; Browning Literary Society; Hort. Club; Cosmopolitan Club; Wesley Foundation. KNOX, ZORA L. Delta Zeta; Enchilada )ustin Home Economic Emporia Instttutional Economics i; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Kappa Phi, Margaret ; Club. KRAUSE, ADA LEAH Gena il Science Intramural Swimming (2). M.A Y. W. C KRAUSE, EDITH EMMA ' Marysville General Science Y. W. C. A.; Intramural Swimming (2). KRAUSE, LILLY ANNA Marvsville General Science Y. W. C. A., Intramural Swimming (2). KUGLER, HAROLD L. Abilene Agricultural Administration Farm House; Alpha Zeta; Ag. Economics Club (Vice-Pres., 4); Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Presbyterian C. E. (Pres., 4); Collegiate 4-H Club; Men ' s Glee Club (3-4); Pax; Scarab; Soph. Class Treasurer; Sr. Class Devotional Leader; Men ' s Meat Judging Team; Ag. Barnwarmer Committee (3), Ag. Orpheum (3). Junction City Effingham LANCASTER, KENNETH G. Mechanic jl Engineering LANDRUM, FLORENCE General Science Franklin Literary Society; Kappa Beta. LANTZ, BENJAMIN Landscape Architecture Sigma Nu; College Band; Gargoyle Club. LARGE, THELMA Protection General Science Alpha Delta Pi; W. A. A.; Y. W. C. A.; Enchiladas; Rille Team; Class Teams (2-3-4). LARGENT, ERNEST Qak Hill Commerce Phi Lambda Theta; Debate (4). LAYMAN, LOUISE ARiiMGrnN Industrial Journalism LEACH, BEULAH MAE Bird City Dietetics and Institutional Home Economics Prix, Eurodelphian Literary Society; Kappa Phi (Cabinet, 2); Margaret Justin Home Economics Club (Pres., 3); Delegate to National Home Economics Association in Detroit (2); Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2-3-4, Vice-Pres., 4); Weslev Foundation Cabinet (2). LEMON, MARJORIE IRIS Wakefield Music Education Pi Beta Phi; Glee Club; Chorus, Enchiladas. LEONARD, CAROLYN ALICE Coolidge Dietetics and Institutional Economics Ionian Literary Society (Corres. Sec ' y, 4, Chairman of Board, 4); Home Economics Club; Wesley Foundation Orchestra; Y. W. C. A.; Kappa Phi. LETTS, A. EDGAR A. I. E. E.; Y. M. C. A LINDLEY, WILLIAM H Electrical Eni inemng ViCKSBURG, Miss ' I ' etmitan MtJuhii Phi Sigma Kappa; Y. M. C. A. (1-2); Phi Kappa Phi, Gamma Sigma Delta; Jr. A. V. M. A, (Pres.)- LINGE, DOROTHY Topeka Home Economn-i Kappa Kappa Gamma; W, A. A.; Purple Pepster, Y. W. C. A.; Pres. Soph. Commission, Enchiladas, Home Economics Cluh LONG, JOHN ROYER Abilene Chemical Engineering Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sigma Tau; Sigma Xi; Phi Kappa Phi, Engineers ' Open House Committee (4). LORIMER, ADA G. Institutional Economics Y. W. C. A.; Collegiate 4-H Club; Theta Pi. Olathe LOVE, HAROLD Wilsey Animal Husbandry Phi Lambda Theta; Block and Bridle; Alpha Phi Omega; Hamilton Literary Society, College Band (1-2); Men ' s Glee Club i.,2). k ' ELL, VERLA Home Economics Topeka LOVELESS, ELBERT Agricultural Adnnnistration Alpha Gamma Rho. Denton, Texas LOWE, ALVIN E. Agronomy Farm House; Y. M. C. A.; Athenian Literal Kernel Klub. Argonia -y Society; Klod and LUKENS, ROBERT W. Beloit Animal Husbandry Block and Bridle Club (2-3-4); Y. M. C. A. (2). LYNCH, MARGARET ANNA Hutchinson Hotne Economics Zeta Tau Alpha; Eurodelphian Literary Society (1-2), Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A. LYTTLE, WARREN P. Council Grove Electrical Engineering Alpha Kappa Lambda; Athenian Literary Society. McADAM, VERNA Parsons General Science Pi Beta Phi. McCORD, HAL H.,Jr. Manh. ttan Architectural Engineering Kappa Sigma; Sigma Tau; Steel Ring; Phi Mu Alpha, Scabbard and Blade; Alpha Phi Omega; Gargoyle Club (Treas., 2-3-4); Student Coun- cil; Activity Fund Budget Committee; Lieut. -Col. R. O. T. C. (4); Rifle Team (2-3-4); Y. M. C. A. Board (3); College Band (1-2-3-4); Orchestra (1-2-3); Engineers ' Open House Committee (2-3-4); Engi- neering Council (4); Kansas State Engineer (3); Varsity Swimming (2); Intramural Letter (2-3). McCURDY, FRANK C.,Jr. Leavenworth General Science Phi Delta Kappa; Webster Literary Society; Lone Star Athletic Club; Track. McDOUGAL, IVAN E. Atwood Electrical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sigma Tau; Steel Ring; T. S. L.; Pax; Scarab (Pres.); A. I. E. E. (Pres., 3); Engineers ' Open House Committee (3-4); Kansas State Engineer Staff; Sr. Men ' s Panhellenic; Y. M. C. A. (1-2-3-4). Valley Falls Veterinary Medicine El C.ajon, Cal. shal, 2, Treas., 3); McGlNNIS, C. L. McLEAN, ROBERT T. Veterinary Medicine Alpha Gamma Rho; Jr. A. V. M. A. (Ma Y. M. C. A.; Advanced R. O. T. C. McMAHON, THURMUL F. Beattie Clvi! Engmecrin? Phi Kappa, Pax, Scarab; Newman Club, A. S. C. E; St. Benedicts College (1-2). xMcNAY, E. J. Tau Kappa Epsik Agncidtii Cl. y Center MALTBY, DOROTHY L. Physical Education Pi Beta Phi; Enchiladas; Phi Kappa Phi. MARK, MERLE Abilene Imtitutional Howe Economics Alpha Xi Delta; Theta Pi; Sophomore Vice-President, Fr. Women ' s Pan- hellenic ; ' ,Sec ' v-Treas.j; Freshman and Sophomore Commission; Y. V. C. A., Cabinet (4); Home Economics Club (Council, 3, Treas., 4), Enchiladas (Sec ' v- Treas., 3, Pres., 4). MARTIN, VERA Kappa Kappa Gamma MASDEN, MILDRED Howe Economics H.ASTiNGS, Neb. Lenora Alusic Education Beta Phi Alpha; Enchiladas; Chorus; Glee Club; Sorcerer (1); Mikado (4); 4-H Music Appreciation (Radio), MATHER, HARRIET CAROLYN General Science Browning Literarv Society : Pres., 3, Treas Y. W. C. A. Burdett Intersociety Debate (2); M.ATTER, MURRAY E. Jewell Agricultural Engineering A,S.A.E.,Lieut.-CoI.R.O.T. C; Treas, A. S. A. E. (4); Military Ball(4). Ellin MELLIES, NORMAN JOHN Electrical Engineering VOOD S. c City, Iow. Merri.am MERKLEY, E. O. Veterinary Medicine Acacia, Jr. A. V. M. A.; Scabbard and Blade; Scarab. MEYERS, JOHN W. Commerce Phi Sigma Kappa, Pax; Scarab; Senior Class Treasurer; Ag. Orpheum (2-3 ; Inter-Fraternity Sing (1-2-3); Intramural Letter (3); Football Squad (3-4). MILLER, JOHN I. Prescott Animal Husbandry Phi Kappa Phi; Alpha Zeta; Gamma Sigma Delta; Ai; Associa- tion (Pres., 4); Block and Bridle Club fPres., 4); Fre ' shman Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; Sophomore Honors; Poultry Judging Team (3), Livestock Judging Team (3-4); Meats Judging Team (4); Danforth Award (3); Ag. Student Staff (4); Alpha Zeta Freshman Award; Mgr. Livestock Judging Contest i ' 3); Mgr Fitting and Showing Contest (4). MILLER, JOYCE WALKER Svc.more Agricultural Administration Webster Literary Society (Pres., 4); Aggie Knights; Intersocietv Debate (3)- tt restling Team (3-4); K Fraternity. MILLER, MILDRED ' M..nh..tt..n Music Education Y. W. C. A.; Mu Phi Epsilon; Glee Club. MOREHOUSE, NEAL F. M. nh..tt..n Zoology Franklin Literary Society (Pres., 4); Kansas State Aeronautical Ass ' n (1); Dynamis; Student Faculty Forum (Project Committee Chairman); Phi Delta Kappa. Loui MOORE, GILBERT CARLYLE Poultry Husbandry Webster Literary Society; Cosmopolitan Club; Alternate on Poultrv Tudging- Team (2); College Y. M. C. A.; Poultry Judging Team (3). ' MORRISON, EARL F. Physical Education Colby MUDGE, STUART REDINGTON S. lin, Electrical Engineering Sigma Tau (Pres., 4); Phi Kappa Phi; Kansas State Engineering Association (Pres., 4); A. I. E. E. (Pres., 4); Friars; Engineers ' Open House Committee; Engineers ' Executive Council. MUNDELL, ESTHER Nickerson Home Economics MUNSON, GAYLORD R. Junction City Animal Husbandry Alpha Gamma Rho; Y. M. C. A.; Block and Bridle, Debate (2); Track (1-2); Manhattan Theater; T. S. L.; Pax; Kansas Ag. Student (Bus. Mgr., 2); Who ' s Whoot (Bus. Mgr.); Collegiate 4-H Club (Vice-Pres., 2, Pres., 3); President Master 4-H Club of Kansas (3), Junior Livestock Judging Team; Senior Class Marshal; Ag. Ass ' n, Sr. Livestock Judging Team (4); Senior Meats Judging Team (4); Delegate to Am. Rural Life Ass ' n, Madison, Wis. (2); Representative to Student Section Rural Life Ass ' n (3); Scarab; Editor Kansas Ag. Student (4); Ag. Fair (3). NEELLY, SHELBY M. Hopewell Physical Education Farm House; K Fraternity; Football (3 vrs.); Intramural Wrestling Champion (3 yrs.). NELSON, NORRIS WILLIAM McPherson Tau Kappa Epsilon, Collegiate 4-H Club, Collegiate 4-H Club Quartette; Klod and Kernel Klub; Men ' s Glee Club; Chorus. NEWMAN, E. M. LaCrosse Ciiil Engineering Phi Sigma Kappa, Sigma Tau; A. S. C. E.; Pax, Open House Com- mittee (2). NIEBERDING, JOSEPH F. Marysville Veterinary Medicine NIXON, ERMINE Manhattan Food Economics and Nutrition Browning Literary Society; Kappa Phi; Intersociety Council, Y. W. C. A., Margaret Justin Home Economics Club. NOELL, ORVILLE A. Electri NUFFER, ORVILLE Phi Delta Theta. jI Engineering Commerce Hartford Leonardville OSSMANN, CARL G. Concordia Architectural Engineering Alpha Rho Chi; Phi Mu Alpha, Scarab, Pax (Treas.); Y. M. C. A.; Fr. Men ' s Panhellenic (Vice-Pres.); T. S. L. (Treas.), Sr. Men ' s Panhellenic (Scc ' y-Treas., 4); Cosmopolitan Club (Sec ' y, 2); Sophomore Class Treasurer; The Green Goddess (3); College Band (1-2-3-4); Drum Major of Band (1-2-3-4); Drum Major R. O. . C. Band (2-3-4); Vox Pop Committee; Gargoyle Club, Engi- neers ' Open House Committee; Mgr. St. Pat ' s Prom (2-3-4). PAGE, C. GROSS Norton Agricultural Administration Farm House; Y. M. C. A.; Ag. Economics Club; Collegiate 4-H Club; Jr. Livestock Judging Team (3); Poultry Judging Team 13), Dairv Livestock Judging Team (4); Senior Livestock Judging Team. PAGE, W. NEWELL Detroit Agricultural Administration Farm House; Ag. Economics Club (Corres. Sec ' y); Y. M. C. A.; Collegiate 4-H Club; Ag. Association, T. S. L.; Little American Royal, Freshman Football; Freshman Basketball. PAIGE, ARLIE E. Minneapolis Electrical Engineering Freshman Commission; Intersociety Plavs; Franklin Literary Societv; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet (3); A. I. E. E. ' ' PAULSON, DORIS ElDorado Physical Education Alpha Delta Pi; W. A. A.; W. A. A. Council; Enchiladas. PEARCE, MARION W. Miltonvale Agricultural Administration Phi Kappa Tau; Ag. Economics Club (3-4, Sec ' y-Treas., 4); K Fraternity; Collegiate 4-H Club; Y. M. C. A.; Ag. Student Staff (4); Ag. Barnwarmer (Treas.); Varsity Track (2-3-4); Varsity 2-Mile Team (2-3-4, Captain, 4). PECK, EUGENE W. Falls City, Neb. Veterinary Medicine Jr. A. V. M. A.; College Band (1). PELTIER, EUGENE J. Concordia Civil Engineering Steel Ring; Sigma Tau; Phi Kappa Phi; Engineers ' Open House Com- mittee (3-4); A. S. C. E. (Pres., 4); Kansas State Engineer Managing Board (4); Editor of Intake and Exhaust (4); Civil Engineer St. Pat. Nominee (4). PETERSON, VIRGINIA Manhattan General Science Alpha Delta Pi; Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Alpha Mu; Dvnamis (Pres., 4); Purple Pepsters; W. A. A.; Y. W. C. A. (Cabinet, 2); Sopho. more Commission (Prcs.); Aggie Orpheum (3); Senior Women -5 Panhellenic (3); Class Hockey Team (1); Class Volleyball (2). PHILLIPS, MARION E. Wichita Civil Engineering Sigma Phi Epsilon; Sigma Tau; Civil Engineering Open House Committee (Chairman, 4); George Washington University, Washington, D. C; University of Wichita, Wichita, Kansas. PICKETT, CHARLES DEETS Kansas Citv, Mo. I ' ttermciry Medicine Jr. A, V. M. A. PISHNEY, MILA Cleburne Home Economics Beta Phi Alpha; Y. W. C. A.; Theta Pi (Pres., 3); W. A. A.; Collegiate 4-H Club; Home Economics Club; Enchiladas; Chorus ' Glee Club, Basketball (1-4), Track (3); Vollevball (A Tenniquoit (4); Hockey (2). ' POCOCK, DALE FRANKLIN Le Rov, Kansas Commerce Phi Kappa Tau; Alpha Kappa Psi (Vice-Pres., 2, Pres., 3); Scabbard and Blade ( Treas. ), Friars, Scarab; Pax, Freshman Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; Senior Invitations Committee, Major ROT. C, Senior Men ' s Panhcllenic (President, 4), Military Ball Committee, Campus Chest Committee; Fraternity Tax Committee. POOLE, ELIZABETH Kansas C.ty, Mo- General Science .Alpha Xi Delta; Ionian Literary Society, Dvnamis, Y. W. C. A., W. A. A. PORTER, HARREL E. Parsons Home Economics Kappa Kappa Gamma. PRATT, RALPH Commerce PRCHAL, CHARLES JOSEPH I ' eterii Acacia, Ir, A. V. M. A. ' Medic Herington Omaha, Neb- PYLE, MARJORIE Manhattan General Science Phi Kappa Phi; Mortar Board; Dynamis; Quill Club (Sec ' y, 2, Pres., 3); Phi Alpha Mu (Sec ' y-Treas., 4); Freshman Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; Sophomore Honors; Theta Pi; Y. W. C. A.; Freshman Commission (Sec ' v-Treas., 1), College Orchestra (T-2- 3-4); W. A. A.;Orchesis(l-2). RAILSBACK, GUILFORD R. Langdon huhistri., Journalism Lambda Chi Alpha, Hutchinson Junior College ( H; The Ivory Door (2)- Easy Come, Easy Go (4); Y. M. C. A.; Roval Purple Stall (3), Collegian features (3). ' RAVEN, JOHN MILTON Agricultural Administration Phi Lambda Theta; Sr. Men ' s Panhellenic; Y. M. C. A. MoRROWVI REED, EUNICE Kanopolis Arcliitecti re Tau Epsilon Kappa (Pres., 4), Theta Pi, Gargoyle Club Y W C. A. Publicity. • REED, ARTHUR LAWRENCE Agricultural Economics Delta Tau Delta; Tri K Club, Ag. Economics Club. Manhattan REID, ADELAINE Chi Omega. REID, KATHERINE Kappa Kappa Gamma Home El al Science REINECCIUS, JAKE LOUIS Creston, Neb. Veterinary Medicine Jr. A. V. M. A. (Marshal, 3), Advanced R. O. T. C, Y. M. C, A. REINHARDT, WILMA Home Economics Alpha Xi Delta; Omicron Nu, Enchiladas; Glee Club; Chor C. A.; Home Economics Club; Fr. Women ' s Panhellenic, Intraniurals, Phi Kappa Phi. RHODES, HARLAN C. Manh- ttai Commerce Delta Tau Delta; Band (1-2-3); Glee Club (2-3); Ag. Orphcun (Ass ' t Mgr., 3, Mgr., 4); Green Goddess; 19th Hole; ' Your Uncle Dudley; Chip, the Miner ' s Daughter; Dulcy; ' Salt Water; Shannon ' s of Broadway. Bison Y. W. A. A.; ROBERTS, JOHN BISSELL Manhattan Agricultural Adwiunlraliou Kg. Economics Club; Hamilton Literary Society, Gamma Sigma Delta. ROBERTS, JUNE Manhattan Agricithiiral Eiighiecring A. S. A. E. (Vice-Pres., 3, Pres., 4); K Fraternity; Engineer ' s Open House Committee; Wrestling (1-2-3, Captain, 4). ROBERTS, V. R. Manhattan Electrical Engineering Hamilton Literary Society; Mortar and Ball; Sigma Tau;Dynamis; Engineers ' Open House (4); Captain R. O. T. C. ( 4). ROCKWOOD, PHILLIP D. Parke Alpha Rho Chi. RODDA, MARTHA Arma Dietetics Omicron Nu; Phi Kappa Phi; Home Economics Club (Vice-Pres., 4); V. A. A., Women ' s K Fraternity. ROEPKE, RAYMOND R. Manhattan Induitrial Chemistry Theta Xi; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Phi Kappa Phi; Dynamis; Chem. Club; Y. M. C. A.; Freshman Phi Kappa Recognition; Sopho- more Honors. RONIGER, ELIZABETH Hymer Home Economics Kappa Beta; Home Economics Club; Orchestra (2); Y. W. C. A. ROSS, MERLE MARGUERITE Dover General Science Chi Omega; Phi Alpha Mu; Senior Women ' s Panhellcnic, Campus Chest Committee; Purple Pcpsters; Bit and Bridle Club, W. A. A. ROW, ESTHER Earned General Science Aloha Delta Pi, Student Council (Sec ' y, 4), Y. W. C. A.; Dynamis. ROWLAND, HAROLD T. Clay Center General Science Franklin Literary Society, Intersociety Council. RUCKER, A. W. Americus Eltctncal Engineering Sigma Tau; Engineers ' Open House Committee; A. I. E. E. RUNDLE, AILEEN Clay Center Home Economics Beta Phi Alpha; Enchiladas; W. A. A.; Y. W. C. A., Cabinet (4); Theta Pi (Vice-Pres., 4); Franklin Literary Society; Intersociety Council (3-4, Pres., 4); Glee Club (3); Intersociety Debate (2); Oratpry (3); Home Economics Club (2-3-4); Home Economics Club Council (3-4); Intramurals (3-4). RUSH, LOYAL L. unior A. V. M. A. Veterinary Medicine Erie Empori. SCHEEL, JEAN WILLARD Indas trial Journalism Farm House; Sigma Delta Chi; Blue Pencil Club (K. S. T. C); Sunflower Staff (K. S. T. C, 2); Gilson Players; Manhattan Theater, Boom Boom; Glee Club; Chorus. SCHEU, LOUISE Physical Education Kappa Delta; Enchiladas. Manha SCHLEMMER, LORENA Kans.as City, Mo. Home Economics Alpha Delta Pi; Enchiladas; Theta Pi; Aggie Orpheum (3), Y. W. C. A.; Home Economics Club; Home Economics Club Council; W. A. A.; Tenniquoit (4), Archery (3); Kansas City, Mo. Junior College (1-2). SCHNACKE, MARY ALICE LaCrosse Industrial journalism Theta Sigma Phi (Pres., 4); Prix; Mortar Board; Ionian Literary Society; Intersociety Council; Collegian Board; Y. W. C. A. (Pres., 4); Manager of Aggie Pop (3). SCHOLZ, CiRACE LEONA Frankfort Dietetics Y. W. C. A.; Theta Pi; Home Economics Club; Women ' s Meat-, udging Team (4). i i,: SCHRUBEN, LUKE M. Hoxie Agrtcultriral Economics Alpha Gamma Rho; Gamma Sigma Delta; Phi Kappa Phi- y MCA (1-2-3)- College Band (1-2-3::, Editor of Farm Notes of Ag. Student (4) Ag Associa- tion, Ag Economics Club (Treasurer, 4), Intramural Wrestling Champion 172 Pound Class : 3). ° f • ' SCOTT, ' aRTHUR M. PixTSBURo Architect ura Engnieenug Pi Kappa Alpha. SCOTT, J. FOSTER Manhattan Industrial Journalism Lambda Chi Alpha; Sigma Delta Chi; Quill Club; Roval Purple Staff (1); Collegian Staff (1-2, Ass ' t Editor, 2); Collegian Board (2). SCOTT, HAROLD J. SELLS, WILLIAM A. Phi Lambda Theta. SEYB, FLOYD A Commerce Electrical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon. ricultural Administration Altoona Effingham Pretty Prairie SEYB, LAURENCE C Delta Tau Delta. General Science Pre • Prairi: TOPEKA SHANER, RALPH FRANKLIN Veterinary Medicine Acacia; Pax; Jr. A. V. M. A.; Boxing. SH AR A, LE NORA MARIE Narka Commerce W A. A ; Y. W. C. A.; Basketball (3-4), Vollevball (3-4); Base- ball (2-3); Tenniquoit (,4), Intramural Dancing (4). SHARA, LEONA E. Home Economics Y. V. C. . ., Home Economics Club. SHARP, JAMES L. SHELLHAAS, GENEVIEVE General Scien Alpha Xi Delta. Junction City SHONYO, ELWYN S. b.shton Industrial Chemistry Sigma Phi Epsilon; Phi Mu Alpha;. Phi Lambda Upsilon : Pres. :, Go-to- College Team (2-3). SLECHTA, JOSEPH CHARLES E.«t St. Louis. III. General Science Phi Mu Alpha ::Treas., 4); Phi Delta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi; Orchestra ,1-2-3-4;, Band (1-3-4), Wesley Foundation League (Sec(v, 4); Fresh- man Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; Sophomore Honors. SMERCHEK, HELEN E. Garnett Home Economics Beta Phi Alpha; Ionian Literary Society; Enchiladas, Kappa Beta; Y. W. C. A., Big Sister Captain (4); Vollevball : 4;, Tenniquoit (4), Baseball (4). SMILEY, ESTHER Alpha Xi Delta. SMITH, HUBERT L Home Economics and Ar Veterinary Medicine A. V. M. A.; Y. M. C. A. SMITH, PANSY Institutional Economics Margaret Justin Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A. Marshall Mor SMITH, PAULINE MINICK Talmage l!o,m Eamomns Margaret Justin Home Economics Ciiih; Franklni Literarv Society; Kappa Phi; Y. W. C. A. SMITH, RUSSELL B. Manhattan Mechanical Engineerinz Delta Tau Delta; K Fraternity; Friars (Pres.); Sigma Tau (Vice-Pres.) ; A. S. M. E. (Sec ' y, 4); Freshman Class Vice-President; President Fresh- man Commission; Y. M C. A.; Chairman, Go-to-College Team (2); Engineers ' Open House 2-3-4); Senior Men ' s Panhellenic (3-4); Foot- ball (1); Basketball (1); Track (1-2-3), Intramural K (1-2). MOUNDRIDGE SMITH, VELMA Gcncml Sc SMITH, VIRGINIA MoUNDRIDGE SMITH, WALTER BRUCE Hoisington Mechanical Engineering, Acacia; Pi Epsilon Pi; Freshman Panhellenic, Senior Panhellenic. SNODGRASS, WILLIAM B. Anchorage, Alaska Veterinary Metiicine Ir. A. V. M. A. STEELE, ELIZABETH C. Manhattan Howe Economics and Nursing Zeta Tau Alpha, Enchiladas; Y. W. C. A.; Margaret Justin Home Economics Club. STEELE, MAURINE Manhattan Home Economics STEWART, W. R. Lowemont Electrical Engineering Phi Lambda Theta, Mortar and Ball; Franklin Literary Society, Pax; A. I. E. E.; Sigma Tau; 1933 Engineers ' Open House Committee. STILES, RUTH ' . Kansas City Indttstnal Journalism Alpha Xi Delta, Theta Sigma Phi (Treas., 4), Prix (Sec ' y); Mortar Board (Treas.); Student Council (4); Chorus; Glee Club (3-4); Campus Chest Com- mittee (4); Y. W. C. A.; W. A. A. (Treas., 4); Intramural Teams (1-2-3-4). STOSKOPF, ELDEN G. Mechanical Engineering Baxter Springs Manhattan Phi Kappa Tau. STRICKLAND, RUTH General Science- ' Pi Beta Phi. STULL, CHARLES W. Osborni Electrical r -tiineering Delta Sigma Phi. SUTTER, GENEVA Effinghan Home Economics Home Economics Club (1-3-4); Theta Pi (3-4); Y. W. C. A.; Women ' Meats Judging Team (4). SWAIN, B. G. Sigma Nu. McPme ulustrial Journalts. TATUM, HUGHEL K. Earned Mechanical Engineering Sigma Tau; Engineers ' Open House Committee; Phi Kappa Phi. TAYLOR, ELMER A. Solomon Agricultural Ene,ineering A. S. A. E. TEALL, LEWIS WHITNEY Earned Civil Engineering Kappa Sigma; Sigma Tau; Scarab; Wise Club (Pres.); A. S. C. E. (Vicc-Pres.); Freshman Phi Kappa Phi Honors; Ivory Door; Publicity Committee Engineers ' Open House. • TEDMAN, HELEN Home Economics Beta Phi Alpha; Ionian Literary Society; Kappa Y. W. C. A., Collegiate 4-H Club; Intramurals. Mount Hope Home Economics Club, THACKREY, J. FRANKLIN Manhattan Indiiitnal Journalism Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Sigma Delta Chi (Treat., 3-4), Hamilton Literary Society (Rec. Sec ' y, 3), Intersociety Council (Vice-Pres., 3); Wesley Foundation (Treas., 3); Royal Purple Staff (Editor, 4); Sophomore Honors; Friars; Student-Faculty Forum Vocational Committee (3). THOMSON, ARTHUR C, McCune Dairy Husbandry Farm House; Alpha Zeta; Dairy Club (1-2-3-4, Pres., 3-4); Block and Bridle Collegiate 4-H Club, Dairy Cattle Judging Team; Jr. Livestock Judging Team Sr. Livestock Judging Team, Ass ' t Mgr. Dairy Fitting and Showing Contest Mgr. of Ag. Barnvvarmer; Wrestling (1), Track (1). THOMPSON, PENN Perry Agricultural Administration Farm House; Hamilton Literary Society; Collegiate 4-H Club; Ag. Economics Club, Y. M. C. A.; ' Who ' s Whoot (Editor, 4); College B. Y. P. U. (Pres., 4); 4-H Radio Announcer (4); Delegate to Am. Coun try Life Ass ' n Conference, Iowa (3). THOMPSON, THOMAS M. ' Mulberry I etcnnary Medicine Jr. A. V. M. A. TODD, IRENE L. Topeka Home Economics Phi Kappa Phi; Omicron Nu (Treas., 3-4); Home Economics Club Council (2-3), Van Zile Hall (Pres., 4); Y. W. C. A. TOMSON, BLANCHE LOUISE Home Economics Clovia, Y. W. C. A.; Collegiate 4-H Club, Home Economics Club. TOWNSEND, EVA p, Home Economics Alpha Delta Pi. TURK, RICHARD D. Veterinary Med ct Acacia; Jr. A. V. M. A.; Phi Kappa Phi. Ash Grove, Mo. VAN CAMP, RALPH A. Council Grove Industrial Journal tstn Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Mu Alpha (Historian, 2-3, Sec ' y, 4); Sigma Delta Chi; Dynamis (, Publicity, 2-3-4); Hamilton Literary Society; Collegian Board ' (3-4); Y. M, C. A. Publicity (2-3;) Y. M. C. A. Board (4); Con- gregational Student Helper (2-3-4); Collegian Bu.s. Mgr. (3), Royal Purple Staff (2); Band i;i-2-3-4); Orchestra (2-4), Student-Faculty Con- ference Delegate (2); Winner Intersociety Oratorical Contest (4); Fresh- man Phi Kappa Phi Recognition; Sophomore Honors. VAN DOREN, LYLE Scabbard and Blade. VAUPEL, ROBERT V Uechamcal Engii Commerce Lambda Chi Alpha, Advanced R. O. T. C. VAUTRAVERS, MARVIN E. Centralia Poultry Husbandry Farm House; Y, M, C, A. Cabinet, Collegiate 4-H Club, Poultry Judging Team ; College Band, Hamilton Literary Society, Dairy Club, Intcr-Collegiate Fitting and Showing Contests. VESECKY, STEPHEN Kansas City Milling and Grain Industry Phi Sigma Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi Freshman Recognition; Alpha Zeta; T. S. L. ([Sec ' y-Treas.); Pax (Sec ' y-Treas.); Scarab (,Sec ' y); Friars (Sec ' y); Manager Theodoric Party; Co-Mgr. Ag. Fair; Bus. Mgr. 1933 Royal Purple; Royal Purple Board; Ag. Barnwarmer, Ag. Fair Board; Fr. Men ' s Panhellenic; Sr. Men ' s Panhellenic. WAGSTAFF, BETTY JANE Alpha Xi Delta. Physical Education WAGNER, RAYMOND B. Animal Husbandry Collegiate 4-H Club, Block and Bridle Club. WAHL. WILBUR Whe.aton Landscape Gaideliing Alpha Kappa Lambda, Collegiate 4-H Club, Hamilton Literaty Society; College Orchestra; Collegiate 4-H Club Orchestra. WALKER, FREDERICK HENRY, Jr. Agnculture Poponoe Entomological Club. WALKER. SAMUEL CYRIL Ctt ' tl Engineering Aggie Knights, A. S. C. E.; Radio; College Baseball (4). Salem, Mass. Junction City WARDELL, J. |. Pl.wteville, Colo. Poultry Husbandry Athenian Literary Society (Pres.. 4); Poultry Judging Team (3-4). WASHINGTON, ANNE Manhattan General Science Pi Beta Phi, Y. W. C. A.; W. A. A.,Theta Pi; Bit and Bridle. WEBB, HARVEY RUSSEL Mechanical Engineering Athenian Literary Society; Aggie Knights. WELLS, EUGENE L. Delta Sigma Phi. WELLS, JAMES W Civil Engineering Winona Chemical Engineer ing Acacia; Mortar and Ball; Third Place, Intcrsocietv Oratoricals C3); First Lieut. R. O. T. C; Rifle Team (4). WHITFORD, MABEL LOUISE Hutchinson Induitrial Journalism Delta Delta Delta, Pi Kappa Delta; Phi Kappa Phi, Theta Sigma Phi, Sigma Delta Chi Scholarship Recognition, Y. W. C. A. WILLIAMS, DONALD M. General Science Lambda Chi Alpha; Manhattan Theater. Manhattan WILSON, BESSIE ANN Kansas City Home Economics Home Economics Ass ' n; Kappa Beta; Y. W. C. A.; German Club; Kansas City, Kansas Junior College, Girls ' Athletic Ass ' n. WILTSE, FLORENCE RrvF.R FoRP.sr, Ii, General Science Chi Omega; Enchiladas; Phi Kappa Phi Freshman Rccognitioi Orchestra (1-2-3); Manhattan Theater; W. . . A.; Junior Class Siviii ming Team; Junior Class Volleyball. kMi WINDIATE, LOIS Nickerson Howe Economics Eurodelphian, Home Economics Club; Y. W. C. A.; Intersociety Council; Home Economics Council. WOLKENSDORFER, AGNES Herndon Howe Economic J WOODWARD, REX V. Elecrncal Engiiieer ng Alpha Kappa Lambda, Mortar and Ball. Medicine Lodge H. RRisBURG, III. WOOLCOTT, JOHN P. F o! r Milling Engineering Phi Kappa Tau, Sigma Tau; Steel Rine, Scarab; Kansas State Engineer Staff. WOOSTER, A. E. Captain, R, O. T. C. Electrical Engineering WRIGHT, ELEANOR Concordia Industrial Journalism Chi Omega. Prix (Pres.); Enchiladas; Pi Kappa Chi, Frivol Mgr. (3); W. A. A. Council (2-3-4); Pres. Sr. Women ' s Panhellenic (4); Purple Pepsters, Frivol (2-3); Aggie Pop (1-2-3); Varsity Honor Tennis Team (1); Swimming Mgr. (2); Tennis Mgr. (3); Dancing Mgr. (4). WYATT, DONALD ' Stockton Industrial Journalism Phi Delta Theta, Kansas State Collegian (Ass ' t Editor). YOXALL, EVERETT F. Woodston Agricultural Administration Ag. Economics Club; Aggie Knights. ZEBOLD, ROBERT A. Little Rock, Ark. Agricultural Administration Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Vice-Pres. SeniorClass,Sr. Men ' s Panhellenic ( Secretary). ZECKSER, WALTER W. Alma Agricultural Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon, Friars; Football Captain. ZIMMERMAN, IVA MAY Simpson General Science Kappa Beta, Phi Alpha Mu, Dynamis; Phi Kappa Phi; Y. W. C. A. LASHELLE, MARJORIE Pi Beta Phi. Ma Adler, Leonard R. Goddard Electrical Engintenng Junior AiCHER, Louis C. Havs Electrical Efigtneerwg Sophomore Arnold, Clarisa Frankfort Home Economics Sophomore AsBiLL, Stephen G. California I ' eter Diary Medicine Sophomore Ater, Clarence Fort Scott Agriculture Junior Bailey, W. M. New Hampton, Iowa Architecture Sophomore Beal, Charles Ludwig Avoca, New York Architecture Sophomore Bean, Richard S. Schenectady, New York Electrical Engineering Junior Benjamin, K. W. Deerheld Commerce Freshman Berryman, C. Price Fredonia General Science Freshman Boettcher, John Holton General Science Freshman Brasche, Mabel Volland Home Economics Junior Brewer, Kay Mount Hope General Science Special Brewer, Lee Hartford Agriculture Sophomore Brookover, Earl C. Scott City Civil Engineering Junior Brown, Gertrude Sedan Home Economics Freshman Butler, L. W. Independence Architecture Sophomore Callahan, Wayne Coffeyville Electrical Engineering Sophomore Carrel, Leonard Topeka Electrical Engineering Sophomore Childs, Marion Hoisington General Science Junior Clark, Charles H. Almena Civil Engineering Freshman Coll, Eunice May Ottawa Home Economics Freshman Conger, Grace Ionia Music Education Junior Cook, Wilma Ashville Physical Education Sophomore Cool, Louis H., Jr. Glasco Agriculture Freshman Creed, Joe F. BartlesviUe, Oklahoma General Science Sophomore Davidson, F. E. Madison Agriculture Junior Davis, W. B. Burr Oak Civil Engineering Junior DeBaun, Ruth Topeka Industrial journalism Sophomore DiEHLMAN, Evelyn Findlay, Ohio Home Economics Freshman Droz, Alice E. Humboldt Home Economics Sophomore Elaver, Frank H. Manhattan Architectural Engitmrm Freshman Erdtmann, George Ellsworth Physical Education Sophomore Erdtmann, William C. Ellsworth Physical Education Freshman Farmer, William R. Kansas City Music Education Freshman Finch, Panice Oketo Industrial Journalism Sophomore FiTZMORRIS, C. M. Fredonia Civil Engineering Freshman FiTZMORRIS, Wayne Fredonia Mechanical Engineering Freshman Fleenor, Mary Elizabeth Manhattan Home Economics Freshman Forbes, B. C. Leavenworth Mechanical Engineering Junior Foulds, James C. Hutchinson Mechanical Engineering Junior Fox, Don Longford Industrial Chemistry Junior Froelich, Larry Abilene Commerce Junior Fuller, William G. Ponca City, Oklahoma Mechanical Engineering Freshman Galley, Townsend Newton Civil Engineering Freshman Garrison, George Goodland Agriculture Sophomore Gill, Dorothy ' Concordia Home Economics and Art Freshman Gill, George L. Raymond Industrial Chemistry Junior Gillidett, Dwight Plains Architectural Engineering Sophomore Going, Jack Topeka Mechanical Engineering Junior Grage, Carlyle Wichita Agricultural Administration Sophomore Green, Margaret Pratt Home Economics Freshman Groody, Tom Manhattan General Science Freshman Groves, Frank R. Atchison General Science Sophomore Hancks, Dorsay Wamego General Science Freshman Hardman, Charles F. Anthony Chemical Engineering Freshman Harper, Helen Ruth Herington Home Economics Junior Hartman, H. L. Hoisington Mechanical Engineering Sophomore Hartman, John L. Omaha, Nebraska Mechanical Engineering Junior Hawk. Irving Effingham Agricultural Administration Junior Heidebrecht, Allen R. Huhlcr Electrical Engineering Junior Heikes, Hazel Wakefield General Science Sophomore Hemker, Karl M. Electrical Engineering Herring, Wayne J. Agriculture Hill, Frederick W. General Science Hilton, Neva Home Economics HOLMAN, KatHERINE Home Economics and Art HoLMAN, RoSEMA Home Economics Hoopingarner, George Agnculture Hostetler, Pius H. Agriculture HuRD, John Veterinary Medicine Jacobs, Wayne W. Agriculture Janssen, Caroline A. General Science Johnson, James M. Agricultural Economics Jones, Margaret General Science Kbeney, Donalda Industrial Journalism Kerr, George M. Veterinary Medicine Kimball, Alice General Science King, Leslie W. Flour Milling Engineering Kirk, Henry C. General Science Knisely, Artha Lee General Science Kostner, Clark General Science Krehbiel, Louise Home Economics Lake, Gerald A. Chemical Engineering Lathrop, Bernice Industrial Journalism Lautz, Barbara Home Economics and Art LeClere, James Physical Education Leemhuis, Walter J. Electrical Engineering Leshosky, Dorothy Dietetics Light, Bernice M. Home Economics McKiNNEY, Florence Home Economics McKinney, Kathryn Physical Education Great Bend Junior Tulia, Texas Freshman Huntington, New York Junior Attica Sopliomore Manhattan Freshman Manhattan Sophomore Manter Freshman Harper Junior Pawnee City, Nebraska Junior Harper Junior Lorraine Freshman Sylvia Sophomore White City Freshman Lucas Freshman Manhattan Sophomore Manhattan Junior Wichita Sophomore Scott City Sophomore Liberal Freshman Murdock Sophomore Newton Junior Manhattan Freshman Smith Center Sophomore Amarillo, Texas Junior Coffeyville Junior Rome, New York Junior Cuba Freshman Yates Center Freshman Bartlesville, Oklahoma Junior Bartlesville, Oklahoma Junior McNay, Joe K. Manhattan Physical Education Sophomore Madaus, Margaret Alice Hutchinson Home Economics Junior Majors, F. B. Elmo Commerce Freshman MARiNfER, R. Edwin Fredonia Mechanical Engineering Junior Marsh. Wilma Chanute Home Economics Sophomore Melchert, Florence R. lola Home Economics Junior Metcalfe, Elmer L. Manhattan Veterinary Medicine Junior Miller, Donald W. Hanover General Science Sophomore Miller, Elizabeth Manhattan Home Economics Freshman MoDiN, Dorothy Olsburg Home Economics Sophomore MoGGE, John G. Goodland General Science Junior Morgan, Mary Manhattan Home Economics Junior Morgan, Muriel Manhattan home Economics Junior Morris, Opal Riley General Science Sophomore MuNAL, Deane Memphis, Tennessee Pre-Medic General Science Freshman Murray, Raymond Schenectady, New York Industrial Journalism Freshman Myler, Lowell Andover Agriculture Freshman Oberhelman, M. C. Randolph General Science Junior Olney, Ethel St. Joseph, Missouri Home Economics Junior OzMENT, Betty Manhattan Home Economics Junior Parcels, Ruth Hiawatha Home Economics Junior Parker, R. L. Kansas City Agricultural Administration Junior Paulson, Carl Eldorado Civil Engineering Freshman Payne, Ellen Manhattan General Science Freshman Peery, Eugene Manhattan Electrical Engineering Freshman Perry, Erma Greenleaf Home Economics Junior Pierce, Blanche Burden Home Economics and Art Freshman Porter, Donald Mt. Hope General Science Sophomore Rathbun, Harlan Manhattan Architecture Junior Reed, Helen Circlcville General Science Juni „ Fatrs S9 Roe, EuGEhTE Manhattan Agrn-i h7ire Junior Ross, John Timken General Science Freshman Ross, Worth Manhattan Gcnei-iil Science Freshman Rutherford, John Ft. Riley Ctvi! Engiueenng Sophomore lott, Elizabeth Manhattan builistrul Journalism Junior Sellers, Gardner C. Downs Geneial Science Junior Smith, Arlene Topeka Sophomore Physical Education Smith, F. E. Stockton Architecture Freshman Songer, Fred W. Olathe Architectural Engineering Junior Sperling, Mary Stafford Home Economics Sophomore Stephenson, Paul Clements Agricultural Administration Freshman Street, Maurice Yates Center Cnil Engineering Freshman Stauffer, Maurice Hymer Agriculture Freshman Team, Charley B. Wichita Agriculture Sophomore Thompson, Vera Harveyville Home Econotnics Freshman Thornbrough, Albert Lakin Agricultural Economics Sophomore Thornbrough, Wayne Lakin Genera! Science Freshman TiETZE, Herman Kansas Citv General Science Junior Todd, Sherman Olathe Agriculture Sophomore Vail, Pauline Plains Home Economics Sophomore Vesecky, Ferne Kansas City Industrial Journalism Sophomore Wagner, Virginia Richmond Home Economics Freshman Walbert, Elizabeth Columbus Home Economics Sophomore Wann, Max Manhattan General Science Freshman Ward. Laura St. Joseph, Missouri Home Economics Junior Warner, William Wellington Sophomore Electrical Engineering Wellemeyer, J. Fletcher Kansas City General Science Junior White, Elouise Dalhart, Texas Commerce Sophomore Whitelaw, Mary Kingman Industrial Journalism Junior Wilson, Al R. Rochester, Michigan Comt ierce ' Junior ATHLETICS OOH ILUO Kansas Landscape, Near Fort Kiley A-™-,isX. , -A ■. iif-.M. ' ' . • . • L • ' •. r V -«v : - tMi A . v. .. ' .- u... vr . ' - .%.. Vhotn hil James Mnrhi .- ;.«?3 ' Looking south to the Audi- torium past Fairchild. S . „ as i L Formal Garden Southeast corner ol Stadium. Snow on Fairchild. CJt m ■% , ..A ' H Hi P 1 i M , SiM r J ■•■■HP L ■BWS,. JfTi IfTfl  ' ENGINEERING HALL 1. Short pants that are Wright ' s. 2. It ' ll be a long Jrag now tor Dixon, Phi Sig president. 3- Why I play in the college band. 4. The hot and cold of K fraternity initiation. 5. Lois the swipe Scripter. 6. The last of the Croclcers and the K. S. Sweetheart. 7. Ma. inc Harding making Gaiety . . . Was you there, Charlie? 8. The chip off the Bo block. 9. Now Bnnnie ... at two this is what you are to do . . . said the senior class president. 10. The best dressed boy and girl at the Co-ed Prom. II. Cowboy Harter. 12. The stair steps of the Chi O house. 13. Frankic Jacks. 14. The insides of the Co-ed Prom. 1. The deer Kappa Sigs. 2. Now, now, remember vouVe in the dorm. 3 Vesecky alter driving 48 hours to St. Louis for a drink of beer. 4. Pi K. . . ' s looking backward. 5. Creed as a bov scout during K initiation. 6. Leora Light and Erma Jean Miller eeee-awing. 7. Alpha Xis ready for a swim in the sand pit icy water. 8. Hold ' er Huyck, she ' s falling. 9. Two vets stop their work for a shot. 10. Tri-Delts in formation. 11. Ag fair exhibit last spring. 12. Paul Stephenson dreaming of his bride back home. 13 An ag taking his medicine. 14. But look what this freshman is getting. 15. A leg show at the K initiation. 1r . -1 ■N HI- - a 1. Firs: a freshman cap back. 2. Railsback and Williams, the Lambda Chi Alpha dramatists. 3. Could you believe Winifred Wolf is engaged to a minister-to-be. 4. Zeta Tau girls but not really on the rocks. 5. The girl Barker took home to Kansas City for mother ' s approval. 6. Sig Alphs making muddy prints on Co-eds ' minds. 7. Two vets not before but after. 8. Wiltse and Fockcic posing graciously before the camera. 9. Which is the biggest . . . Wcrtzberger or the push ball? 10. Not a fairy dance, just a catch. II. I prefer well water to 3.2 beer, says young Van Tuyl. 12. Murphy from K. C. 13. Dry Kansas made James Wells like this. 14. Youza, says Rcineckc, I ' m float- ing with a southern breeze (Munal). 15. Pi K. A. ' s the morn- ing before. 16. Ai Wilson tries to ride a burro, but the burro de- cided to ride him all over sunset. 17. Stratford takes it easy. 124 b 1. A send-off for Hasler by Garrison and the two famous Paulsons. 2. Hinshaw and Lawrence in the heat of a good Pi Phi bullfest. 3. Who could look more proud than Creed when the Lambda Chis won intramural swimming, 32. 4. I sho hope you all like these Bussie, says Mary Dexter. 5. This is the winning clinch of the greased pig contcstat the Ag Fair. 6. Harpo Harshaw. 7. Bernice and Grace go picnicking in pajamas. 8. The football fans on a chilly day. 9 Intelligence McDougal. 10. Ellen and Bertha try to persuade Tiny Large that spring is here, n. A vet who can ' t fill his place. 12. The charity six who have donated their vocal cords to the cause of Kansas State. ATHLETIC COUNCI L NICHOLS GYMNASIUM AND DIRECTOR AHEARN Ahearn Throckmorton Dea Farrcll Holton Seat Kins COACHING STAFF AHEARN ' ' NyTIKE, as Kansas State ' s athletic director is popu- larly called, is one of the most widely known men on the campus. Prominent m Kansas State ' s athletics for 29 years, he has retained an interest m several other fields. After graduating from Amherst in 1904, Mr. Ahearn came to Kansas State as a professor of horticulture. He assisted in coaching football, basketball, and baseball, and became coach of these sports in 1905. In 1911, he resigned from this work to turn again to horticulture. In 1920, Mr. Ahearn was placed in charge of athletics and physical education here, upon the resignation of Professor Clevenger, then director of athletics. Director Ahearn was appointed a member of the National football rules committee in 1922. He served on this committee for nine years. He has served as golf coach, and plans to take over the work of coaching baseball as well, next vear. Ccontinued on page 88) THE 1932 FOOTBALL SEASON SEASONS RECORD September 24 Wichita U, October 1 , Purdue U., 29 October 8 ' . K. Wesleyan 6 October 15 Missouri U., 0, October 22 Ok;la. U., 20 October 29 Nebraska U. , 6 , Novembers Iowa State, November 19 Kansas U-, 19 Kansas State 1(, Kansas State 1 3 Kansas State 52 Kansas State 25 Kansas State 13 . Kansas State Kansas State 31 Kansas State 160 Kansas State 2b — Wichita University ETTING into immediate action after the opening kickoff, the Kansas State football team scored two touchdowns before the game was 10 minutes old. The next two scores were not made until the final quarter. The Wildcats outplayed the Wichita University Shockers in every department of the game to win a 26 to victory. The power of the Wildcats is best shown by the summary of the game which lists 16 first downs for the K- State men to three for Wichita University, and 505 yards gained in scrimmage by Bo ' s boys to 24 won by the invaders. Kansas State 52 — Kansas Wesleyan b The Kansas State football team overwhelmed the Kansas Wesleyan team 52 to 6. The score was the most impres- sing ever made bv a Kansas State eleven. Second and third string men played most of the time. The game was played under lights, and was the first night game the Wildcat team had ever played. r fXITBALL COACHES AND SQLIAD RALPH GRAHAM Captain 1Q33 FOOTBALL CAPTAINS ZECKSER Walter Zeckscr, 165-pound guard, played three years of football on tfie McMillin machine. Zeckser, although lacking size, made up his worth in speed and ability. Wally was rated as the hardest hitting man that played in the Wildcat line. He was ranked on the All Big Six team at the end of the 1932 season. Ralph Rammer Graham will captain the 1933 aggregation. Graham, for two years an All Big Six fullback, was second high scorer of the nation last season and rated first in the scoring of the Big Six conference. He has a good disposition and should make a great leader under Coach McMillin next season. Purdue 26 — Kansas State 1 3 TT WAS a smooth working Purdue football team that downed the fighting McMillin men 26 to 13 in a battle which at half time stood 9 to 7 for Purdue. In the air the Kansas State men outclassed the Purdue Boilermakers. The two outstanding plays of the game were results of completed passes; one of them Brecn ' s sluirt pass to Dougal Russell who ran 67 yards for a touchdown and the other a 50-yard heave, Breen to Russell, with Breen standing on his own 34 yard line. The summary shows that Purdue gained 299 yards from scrimmage while Kansas State gained 266 yards. LETTERMEN Harry Hasler, end, was Bo McMillin ' s general unlitv man. Harry can play in any position in the line and has even worked in the backheld- Harry finished his compe- tition last season. Dan Blaine is classified by Leslie Edmonds as the hardest driving end in the Missouri valley. Blaine will he hack for another sea- son of competition. Dougal Russell, hall back, proved himself as a sophomore to be the speediest man on the K-State team. Russell plays heads up ball and will make a valuable man next Kansas State 25 — Missouri DO McMILLIN ' S men bom Kansas State dealt Missouri University its third crushing defeat by drubbing the Tigers 25 to 0. It was Kansas State ' s Big Six opener. The sprinting gains by Dougal Russell and the driving plunges by Graham were outstanding. Graham scored 18 of his team ' s 25 points. LETTERMEN B r P pKapv Tom Bushby, halfback and fullback, played his second year for Kansas State last season. He will he hack next vear. Lloyd Michael, center, was rated by Coach McMillin as the most valuable defensive man in the Big Six. Mike finished his competition last year. George Maddox , tackle, was another big man in the K-Statc line. He saw his hrst conference competition last season, and will be here for two more great years. Oklahoma 20 — Kansas State 13 AN over-anxious football team lost a game to the University of Oklahoma, 20 to 13. It lost, not because it was an inferior eleven, but because the guiding arm had been left at home. Bo, who had been burned a week earlier by a furnace explosion, was forced to remain in a hospi- tal and listen to his team lose ground as the St)oners took the wind. The Wild- cats led 13 to 7 until the hn.il quarter when a herce Sooner passing attack ended in two touchdowns. Page 79 LETTERMEN Melvin Wertzhcrgcr, tackle, used h 210 pounds to an advantage in the lint Wcrtz has lettered two years and wi be back for another great season. Ken Harter. center, was an understudv o Michaels. Ken will be back for another year. Homer Hanson, guard, has won two letters at Kansas State and will be back lor another ' ear. Hanson is also known as Nebraska 6 — Kansas State npHE Nebraska University Cornhuskers, defending cham- pions of the Big Six, won an uphill fight to defeat the K- State team in the final period of play after having plaved a defensive game during the entire first half. Although the Wildcats outplayed the Cornhuskers during the first half, it was a desperate 39-yard march that proved fatal for the McMillin men and gave the Cornhuskers the necessarv points to v ' in. JQ- ft S LETTERMEN r-M. . Henry Hank Dalton was the big, tall end that was down for the K-State passes. Hank was the tallest man on the team. He finished his competition last year. Shelby Neelly, end, played his first year under Coach Charles Bachman. After being out ot school for two years, he returned, to make Coach McMillin a most depend- able end. Neellv finished competition last season. Neil Weybrew, tackle, was the largest man on the Kansas State team. And he was just as good as he was big, too. Kansas State 3 1 — Iowa State T ' ANSAS STATE began with the opening whistle to drive for this winner. Three minutes after the gun sounded the Wildcats had crossed the Iowa goal for the first score. Scores were made bv Russell, who scored twice, Breen, Graham, and Bushbv. The Cyclones had little chance against the strong K-State attack that day. ' n. ' [TW:- ' ' m - W-A - LETTERMEN Leland Shatcr, halfback, is one of the hardest blocking backs on the K-State machine. Shay has another year of competition. Lee Morgan, half, pla ' ed his first year last season and proved his ability to york in the K-State backfield. Morgan is one of the hopes for the 1934 K-State eleven. . . .- ' r Emmctt Breen, half, played his last year last season for coach McMillin. Breen was the most accurate passer that has worn a purple uniform for several seasons. Kansas University 19 — Kansas State SHOWING no offensive power whatsoever, Kansas State lost the annual grid classic to Kansas Uni ' ersitv 19 to 0. It seemed as though the jinx had trailed the McMillin men for several weeks and due to injuries, the men were not in condition for the final tilt of the season. The dav was clear and cold. About 10,000 people saw the game. CHARLES W. CORSAUT COACH CORSAUT ' OACH Charles W. Corsaut has been aLti ' ely interested in athletics for at least thu ' tv vears. Durmg those vears he coached in Salina high school, Kansas Weslevan, and in a Chicago college. He was graduated from Y. M. C. A. college in 1917. In 1915-16 he captained the football and the basketball teains. In the spring of 1917, Mr. Corsaut enlisted for war service. He ended this service in the marine corps, in August, 1919. In that year he went to Kansas Citv, Kansas where he coached football and basketball for four years. His foot- ball teams in that time won 40 out of 44 games. In 1923 his basketball team at Wyandotte high school in Kansas Citv went to Chicago to win the national championship in a high school tournament there. In 1923 Coach Corsaut came to Kansas State where he has coached basketball and baseball. In 1925-26 he helped coach the Kansas City Hillyard basketball team that won the National A. A. U. championship in 1926. This brief summary by no means covers all of his athletic activities, but it is written in tribute to the record he has made at Kansas State. ■■BUS BOYD Captain 1933-34 BASKETBALL CAPTAINS SKRADSKI Captain Andy Skradski headed the Kansas State basketball players through the 1932-33 season. Skradski, a very competent player in any position, was usually sent into the line-up at for- ward, but many times Coach Corsaut called on him to fill in at center, or even at guard. Andv had lots of the fight and chatter which it takes to make an ' man a good captain for his team. BOYD Francis Bus Bo d will le ul the 1933-34 court team. Bov d sprang into the limelight his sopho- more vear when he produced to become a sensation at his guard position. Boyd is known for his long shots irom far back 1:1 the court. He also pla -s on the K-State baseball team. LETTERMEN Oren Stoner, guard, made a letter in his first year of competition. His work was particularly good during the last part of the season. With two years ahead of him, Stoner promises a great deal. Francis W. Bus Boyd, sensational guard, had a good eye for the basket. His long shots were a sensation to the crowd. Boyd will captain the court team next season. Captain Andv Skradski was a general utility man on the court. He plaved for- ward, center, or guard. Skrad finished his competition this season. THE SEASON J ANSAS STATE got off to a great start .n basketball by cJefeat.ng Kansas University two straight games in the rre-season tilts. Boyd was the high scorer with nine field goals in the two games. The next game for Kansas tate was with the Marysville teachers. The teachers came out on the long end of a 28 to 23 score, but the next game was a winner for the Kansas State men. This time the Corsaut men defeated Davis and Elkins College, 35 to 34 The next night made the victory more decisive, when the Wildcats defeated the same team 30 to 19 in a rather dull game. Wichita University nosed out a close victory, 29 to 27 when the Purple cage men could not hit the hoop. Setup after setup saw the ball spin toward the basket to roll out with no score. At Oklahoma the university put the hooks into Kansas State, 28 to 16. (continued on next page) ■MMIllllUUL HI LETTERMEN L. H, ' Hank Dalton, tall football man, did nice work for the Wildcat court men in center position. Dalton has finished his LOmpetition. Rammer Ralph Graham is big and fast. He has to be big to make his sensational line plunges, and he has to be fast to get around the tennis court. Ralph is captain- elect in both football and tennis, and a formidable basketball man. Emmett Breen is just one more all-round athlete from EIDorado. He lettered in lootball, captained the track team, and dazzled more than one court audience by Ins lightning movements when guarding an opposing star on the floor. THE SEASON (continued from preceding page) Then along came the first conference tilt with Kansas University in which the university lads made up for their two previous losses. Big Bill Johnson tossed in nine field goals to give the iini ersit ' a 36 to 24 win over Kansas State. Again with Oklahoma Uni ersity the K-Statc men came out on the short end ol the score, 36 to 39. This game was played at Manhattan. Iowa State was the next ictim of Kansas State, when it was defeated 33 to 23 h the Corsaut men. Tiiis was the first game in which the Wildcats reall - showed their scoring strength. Missouri fell ne. t before the K-Statc offense, 35 to 28, and then Iowa State was defeated 28 to 27 at Ames. Nebraska yielded to Kansas State 36 to 30. Saint Louis fell before the Purple 28 to 24 at Manhattan, and then the Wildcat luck changed again. Kansas University and Missouri both defeated the .Manhattan cage men in the last games of the season, 33 to 25, and 37 to 33. COACHING STAFF (continued from page 74) McMILLIN Everyone knows Bo McMillin, but few people know the Bo that had to stav in a hospital bed and send his team against Oklahoma with(jut him. Something vital remained behind. The team was fighting hard, but over- anxious and self conscious without the guiding hand to direct It. Bo McMillin was in the headlines of everv paper when he played with the Center College team that beat Har- vard. Again, when he was head coach at Geneva Col- lege, another McMillin team sent Harvard to defeat. Coach McMillin believes football is a good game in Itself, but he believes more seriously in his aim to edu- cate young men to be sportsmen. HAYLETT Coach Ward Haylett will be remembered as the indi- vidual who brought Kansas State ' s track teams into real competition with the rest of the Big Six schools. In 1932 he sent his two-mile team to a Big Six champion- ship ac Lawrence. Ward lettered in football, basketball, track, and baseball at Doane College in Crete, Nebraska, and captained the football team during his senior year. Later, he became head coach and director of athletics there, and received a degree long dekiNed b ' the world wars in 1926. Havlett became head track coach at Kansas State in 1928. He is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon, and of Phi Delta Kappa, educational fraternity. Next year he will add the duties of assistant football coach to his work. CORSAUT (A discussion of Coach Corsaut will be found on page 84). mcnt. He has been named as basketball coach for the coming year. WASHBURN L. P. Washburn is best known for his work as director of intramural athletics, a phase of athletic work which is constantly expanding. Mr. Washburn is also an instructor in physical education, and is particularly interested in swimming. MOLL C. S. MoH is coach of tennis and of swimming at Kansas State. He is an instructor in physical education, as well. PATTERSON B. R. Patterson, coach of wrestling at Kansas State, has turned out a number of brilliant mat men. MADDOX O. W. Oss Maddox has assisted Bo McMjllin as head line coach. He was one of the men to feel the economy cut. COCHRANE O. L. Chih Cochrane, red headed grid star under Coach Bachman a few years ago, assists in football part of the year. ROOT Frank P. Root is an assistant football coach, instructor in physical education, and caretaker of athletic equip- ANDERSON Swede Anderson makes the first contact with maiy Kansas State football men, as freshman coach. He is the target for many of the athletic department ' s lokes. THE 1932 TRACK SEASON Kansas State 94 — State Teachers 37 TN THE opening track meet of the season, the Kansas State team put the Kansas State Teachers College Hornets in a rather dizzy state from looking at their heels during the entire afternoon. The Havlett men defeated the Hornets, 94 to 37. The K-State track men scored 11 firsts to four for the Hornets, and made grand slams in the discus, mile, and both hurdle events. Emmett Breen led the Wildcat attack with 15 points. Breen won the high hurdles and the broad ]ump, placed second in the low hurdles, and tied for second in the high )ump. He was the only man on either team to win two events. Kansas Relays Competing against 58 universities and colleges proved rather tough sledding at the Kansas Relays, but in spite of the strong competition, six Kansas State men placed. The Kansas State squad proved stronger in the hurdles than in any other event. The 480-vard shuttle relay team placed second (Breen, Hammel, Hinckley, and Schmutz). Tiiey were defeated only by the University of Iowa team. Other members of the squad to place were Ehrlich in the high jump, and Jordan in the pole vault. Drake Relays Kansas State trackmen won places in four events in the finals at the annual Drake Relavs at Des Moines. The Wildcat shuttle relay quartet placed third. The lank Milt Ehrlich leaped six feet, two and one-half inches in the air to tie with Newblock of Oklahoma for second place in the high jump. (continued on next page) TRACK fi. ' li.An AND COACH O EMMETT BREEN Captain 1933 Drake Relays (continued from preceding page) Darnel], Miller, Smith, and McNeal took fifth place in the medlev relay, and the four-mile quartet of Smith, McNeal, Pearce, and Miller won a sixth place. Indoor Track During the indoor season, virtually the same men were in the play, with Hincklev winning the 60-vard low hurdles and Ehrlich and Jordan winning in the high jump and pole vault. The two mile runners (Pearce and McNeal) won their share of honors in this event. TRACK CAPTAINS HARRY HINCKLEY Captain 1 )32 HINCKLEY Harrv Hinckley, hurdle title holder and dash man, led the 1932 Kansas State track team through a very convincing season. One of the best hurdlers in the Big Six conference for three years, he now holds the world and the Big Six indoor track records in the 60-yard high hurdles with a time of 7-6 seconds. BREEN Emmett Breen was chosen to lead the Kansas State track team during (he 1933 season. Breen is a broad )umper and hurdler. Emmett is a star in football and basketball, as well as in track. The pictures above show a few of the men who hgured in last year ' s track season. Thev by no means represent the team as a whole, but are shown merely to suggest the sport. No. 1 is Marion Pearcc, distance runner. No. 2 is Milton Ehrlich. No. 3, Elmer Black, Captain of the two-mile team. No. 4, Kansas State pole vaulter in action. No. 3, Ehrlich clears the bar. No. 6 shows Harr - Hinckle ' , captain last season, in good form for the high hurdles. No. 7 shows Laurence Daniels. In No. 8 Daniels is all set for a race. No. 9 is M. E. Ni.xon, another distance runner. 1932 BASEBALL SEASON DASEBALL at Kansas Stare ranked well up in rhe conference this season. Although winning several championships in the past, Coach Corsaut ' s team of recruits placed third in the Big Six conference this season. Kansas State started the season off in great style by defeating the College of Emporia, seven to one, in a game that made the Corsaut men look as though thev were slated for another championship season. Then Haskell slipped up and defeated the Corsaut men in a game which might be classed as the wildest of the season. Kansas University downed the K-State m en 12 to three and nine to three in a two game series. Kansas State, the next week, took Oklahoma University to a five to nothing beating in which Auker pitched almost perfect ball. The next week end, Kansas State shared a two game series with Missouri, winning one game seven to six, and losing one 14 to five. Iowa State shared a two game series with the Wildcats, and then the College of Emporia nine again fell before the Corsaut men, 12 to one. Kansas State downed Haskell nine to seven, and then turned the tables on Kansas University by defeating rhe Jayhawkers 12 to one and eight to four in a two game series which will never be forgotten at Manhattan. Auker pitched both games, and the second day was even better than the first. Boyd Gentz ' ' ' ' , Auker Fairbank Hasler ' Lang Prentup Blaine 9, ,|P| J i tiVi V i ■{ ' |iV HIT . ... . FRANK PRENTUP Captain 1 132 M, L. CARTER Captain 1933 BASEBALL CAPTAINS PRENTUP Frank Prentup led the K-State team through the 1932 season in great style, and his errorless ball at second base cannot be forgotten. He possessed a perpetual line of chatter which made him a wonderful leader for his team. Prentup will be remembered for his fielding in the two final games of the season in which Auker beat Kansas University two days in a row. CARTER Peewee Carter is the man to lead the Kansas Staters through the 1933 season. Carter is the smallest man on the team, coming almost to the arm pit of an ' si. -K)oter. He plays shortstop, and the expressive smile he always wears has gained him the admiratujn and confidence of his team mates. LETTERMEN Dan Blaine, catcher and fielder, is another of those red-headed players. He has more lif ht than any two other players, especially in words. Paul Pete Fairhank, center held, is the crooner of the hall cluh. Fairbank ' s |oh was always to entertain the players, on and off the diamond. Andy Skradski, catcher, last season, is a player that everyone should notice. He doesn ' t play well until he jjets niad, hut he must be mad most ol the time. An easy advance; Carter holds the base down; and the Wild- cats ?core a run against Okla- homa. i ' IN dKu— . M, L. Carter is a well known short stop. He plavs good ball and has a nice way of getting along with his team mates. He is captain tor 1933- LETTERMEN Frank Prentup, captain and second base, always wears a chattering face. Prentup and Blaine can take care of the chatter on anv ball club. Robert Lang, pitcher, was held back some- what by paralysis in his pitching arm, but he made a comeback that no coach can overlook. Fairbank is called out at third; (ientz goes to bat; and another K man steals third. LETTERMEN C. W. Gentz, third base, was a new find to Coach Corsaut. He plays good ball, and the coach is expecting a lot from him. Elden Auker, pitcher, was one of the best. Before he was graduated from school he was offered a contract with the Detroit -Tigers. He is now pitching in the Texas eague. Prentup on his wav around the bases; and two Kansas State men passing third. Harry Hasler, fielder, is another man not to be overlooked. Hasler is one of those men who ranks well in any sport. Harry likes it and takes it. TENNIS 1932 SEASON STANDING Kansas State 5 Ottawa U. 1 Kansas State 12 Wichita U. 8 Kansas State 2 Oklahoma U. 4 Kansas State Kansas U. 6 Kansas State 2 C. of E. 4 Kansas State 12 Missouri U. 8 Kansas State 11 CofE. 9 Kansas State 3 Kansas Weslevan 3 Kansas State 5 Ottawa U. 1 WARREN G. LARSON Captain ' OACH Moll ' s net men went through a very successful season by winning five matches and tying one during the season. Captain Larson and Graham played outstanding tennis all season. Both these men were consistent shcrs and hard drivers. Captain Larson plays a smooth game, winning his matches by consistent and accurate placing of all his shots. Gee will be with the team ne.xt vear. Ralph Graham is the captain-elect for next year. Hoglund Graham Coach Moll Silverwood Captain Larson L J V- Wi. THE WRESTLING SEASON Season ' s Record Kansas State 36 Kansas Wesleyan Kansas State 33 Kansas University 5 Kansas State 33 Oklahoma Central Teachers 10 Kansas State 35 ' • Kansas Wesleyan 7 OACH Patterson ' s wrestling team took a short step backward this season from first place to second in the Big Six tournev held at Ames. Only Kansas State and Kansas University shared in the individual honors. The team scores were: Iowa State 48, Kansas State 18, Oklahoma University 15, Kansas University 8, Nebraska University 5, and Missouri University 4. In the 118-pound class Griffith scored a time advantage over Gibson of Iowa State, to win in that class. Roberts- Kansas State, and Bozarth, Kansas State, were second in the 155 and the 175-pound classes. Captain Roberts placed third in his class at the National A. A. U. meet. In this tournament he defeated the National Inter-collegiate Champion. Captain-elect Griffith also placed third in his weight in the National A. A. U. meet. WRESTLING Ca ' CH AND SQUAD Coach Patterson Hopeman Teagarden Lamb Griffith LeClerc Thieie Wetlaufer Mac Donald BozaTth Amett Walters Swift Roberts H.nz SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON INTRAMURAL CHAMPK1NSHIP SWIMMING TEAM THE INTRAMURAL SEASON ' T HE intramural pictures on these pages were the only ones available at press time. A complete summary of the ntramural season follows: The horse-shoe singles were won bv M. L. Carter, Phi Kappa Tau; M. W. Pearce, Phi Kappa Tau, was runner-up. Horse-shoe doubles were won by Virgii Chapman and R. L. Heinz, competing for the W. F. A. C. Runners-up were Donald Christy and R. J. Dicken, Alpha Kappa Lambda. Wavne Thornbrough, Sigma Phi Epsilon, won the basketball free-throw, with J. S. Bidnick, Tau Kappa Epsilon, (continued on nexr page) DELTA TAU DELTA INTRAMURAL CHAMPIONSHIP BASKETBALL TEAM Smith ' Weathers Tellejohn Porter Oberhelman MeNr- l Page 102 Oberhelman Smith. R Gnne Smith, !■SkraJski Blowers Teliejohn DELTA TALI DELTA INTRAMURAL CHAMPIONSHIP VOLLEYBALL TEAM INTRAMURAL SEASON (continued from preceding page) second. Basketball winners were : Delta Tau Delta, group one; Alpha Rho Chi, group two; White Shirts, group three, and Tau Kappa Epsilon, group four. First place in swimming went to Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and second place to Pi Kappa Alpha. E. L. Broghamer, Lone Star, won the hand ball singles. Broghamer and R. W. Armstrong took the doubles. Delta Tau Delta won group . (continued on next page) DELTA SIGMA PHI INTRAMURAL C HAMPIONSHIP SOCCER TEAM : ' % ii4 ■•JHfej M |ii|;M:-,i , ,t ul I INTRAMURAL SEASON I continued troni preceding page) one of unramural soccer, Phi Kappa Tau took group two; Delta S.gma Ph won in group three; and Phi Kanpa m group four. Sigma Alpha Eps.lon won m mdoor track. Wrestling honors, in order of weights, went to Wells, Delta Sigma Phi; Walters, Alpha Kappa Lambda; McDonald, Lone Star; Lamb, Alpha Gamma Rho, Youn,, Lone Star Stark Phi Kappa Tau; and Neellv, Farm House. Group winners in vollevball were: Delta Tau Delta, group one; Alpha Tau Omega, group two, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon, group three. SICM.A ALPHA EPSILON CHAMPIONSHIP INDOOR TR.. CI TEAM MEMBERSHIP .i,,man, Lucille Amos, Juliana Black, Kathervn Blackman, Mary Bland, Hazle BIythc, Marje Eozarth, Alice Brcning, Justine Brown, Rita Burson, Ona Lee Campbell, Marcine Clark, Mary Lou Coinpton, Pauline Cowdery, Gertrude Crawford, Pauline Donnelly, Josephine Davis, Helen DeBaun, Ruth Dexter, Jean Easterday, Margaret Elder, Margaret Fouts, Ella French, Velma Garrison, Clara Bess Gibhs, Madge Gordon, Mae Gottschalk, Elsie Grass, Geraldine Griffith, Mayrie Grimes, Sarah Ann Hahn, Lela Jack, Roberta Johntz, Lucille Kimball, Alice Lang, Leora Lathrop, Bernice Lancaster, Jerrv Lautz, Barbara Light, Leora Linge, Dorothy McCutchen, Zada McKenzie, Emily McKinney, Florence McKinney, Kathervn McMullen, Mary McNally, Wilda Mahoney, Madge Mallon, Kathervn Maltbv, Dorothv Merritt, Ernestine Miller, Erma Jean Morgan, Helen Myers, Margaret Oliphant, Cora Parcels, Ruth Patterson, Margaret Paulson, Doris Payne, Ellen Peterson, Virginia Pishney, Mila Poole, Elizabeth Pyle, Marjorie Ramey, Marjorie Reed, Helen Reid, Katherine Reinhardt, Wilma Rodda, Martha Roper, Maxine Rosencrans. Lois Rundle, Aileen Schlemmer, Lorena Schlickau, Opal Schmedemann, Erma Seaton, Margaret Shafer, Sallv Shara, Lenora Shrack, Harriet Skradski, Rose Smith, Arlene Stiles, Ruth Stinglcy, Lois Sullivan, Jean Swan, Harriet Swenson, Jane Tolin, Helen Townsend, Eva Umberger, Grace Vesecky, Feme Warren, Ellen WagstafF, Bettv Wilkes, Mary Elizabeth Wilkerson, Eleanor Walbert, Elizabeth Wilsey, Alice White, Alice White, Elouise Womer, Wilma Rae Wright, Eleanor Young, Evelyn Wagstaff DeBaun Mcl en2ic Schiickau Hahn Bland Swenson vvan Schlemmer Warren Lancaster Stiles Elder Shields 1 Kimhall Skradski ' esecky Allman Walbert McKinnev. F. Donnelly W. A. A. COUNCIL T HE W. A. A. Council is the supervising body of the Women ' s Athletic Association. The council supervises all class and intramural tournaments. COUNCIL MEMBERS 1932-33 Betty Wagstaff Pnsidttn Doris Paulson ----------------- Vice-President Emily McKenzie Secretary Ruth Stiles Treasurer Florence McKinney Marshal Ernestine Merritt Volleyball Manager Cora Oliphant Basketball Manager Leora Light Baseball Manager Evelyn Young - Tennis Manager Alice Wilsey Archery Manager Eleanor Wright Dancing Manager Erma Jean Miller - Swimming Manager Jane Swenson Field and Track Manager Arlene Smith --- Hiking Manager Dorothy Maltby Posture Manager Mae Gordon .--- ijji Manager He len Morgan Program Manager Mary Lou Clark - Publicity Manager Marcene Campbell - Costume Manager Zeda McCutcheon ----.----------- TennH(iioit Minager Maltby ttr McKmney. F. McKinney. 1 WOMEN ' S K FRATERNITY OFFICERS , MEMBERS ,, ,, ,. Andres, Myrtle Hobson, Esther Maltbv, Dorothy hnulv McKenzic ■- Pmntnit r u ii nr ■t ■i t ... riniacnr Campbell, Marcine Light, Leora Miller, Erma Jeai Doris Paulson V,ci-Prn,doit Davis, Helen McKenzic, Emily Oliphant, Cora Esther Hobson - - Scmrary-Trtasurn Forrester, Mildred McKinney, Florence Paulson, Doris Gordon, Mac McKinncv, Kathervn Pishnev, Milj PURPLE PEPSTERS MEMBERS Amos, Juliana Jack, Frances McCutcheon, Zada Rosencrans, Loi; Bland, Hazle Jack, Roberta McNally, Wilda Ross, Merle Chancy, Margaret Kimball, Alice Maltby, Dorothy Smith, Arlene Clark, Marv Lou Lautz, Barbara Merritt, Ernestine Swcnson, Jan.- Ebling, Eugenia Light, Leora Miller, Erma Jean Siinglcv, ' Lois Forrester, Mildred McKcnzie, Emily Paulson, Doris Wagstaff, B;tty Gordon, Mae McKinney, Florence Peterson, Virginia Young, Evelyn ■■Hobson, Esther McKinney, Katheryn Roper, Maxine Young, Ernestine P.uUon ' - ' ' clT - ' ' ' ' ;7 ' J---- p - - - Swenson ' - Sn Mor.a ' V,.., ' ' - ' -a.l., F. ° %cK,nnev. k ' Rosencrans ' - Swenson, Jane Wagstaff, Bettv Young, Ernestii Young, Evelyn saasa 1. The Alpha Delta Pi team wlio won tlic intramural tcnniquoit championship. 2. King Neptune, Louise Scheu, and her frogs and wood nymphs from the water drama, The Frogs ' Victory, presented by the Frog Club. 3. King Neptune and his jury deciding whether the frogs or the lish are the rightful owners of the pond. 4. The X team who proved the most able listed group and claimed the intramural volleyball championship. 5. Now we have the outstanding iTOg Club swimmers in star formation durnig the swimming pageant. h The two hull ' s eye Van Zile archery women of the intramurals, Martha Rodda and Juanita Shields. 2. Orchesis on a lUng. 3. Ml readv to smack a home-run, but Eleanor Wright is doing her best to stop It, 4, WildaMcNally guarding first. 5. An Auker tling in women ' s intramurals. 6, The winning Phi Omega Pi posture group. 7. Graceful solo (light for this classical dancer. 1. These girls were picked as the most outstanding tenniquoit players in women ' s intramural and class tournaments. 2. These are the best non-major haskethall players picked from all girls entering the combat. 3- The honorary varsity major basketball players of the women ' s tournaments. 4. Batter up, . . . and the women ' s intramural baseball practice is on for a great season. 5. Here we have Oliphant supplying the action and Gordon all set to stop her on hrst. WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC ACTIVITIES OMEN ' S extra-curricular athletics consist mainly of class and intramural tournaments. Organized and inde- pendent teams play for championship in each of the ten major sports sponsored. From these teams the best players of each class are chosen to play a class tournament. The varsity or honorary team is then chosen to represent the most efficient of the sport. Helen G. Saum, head of the department, Bernice Patterson, assistant professor, Lorraine Maytum, and Katherine Geyer, instructors, sponsor these sports with the assistance of physical educatic ion maiors. The winners of the intramural tournaments thisyear are: archery. Van Zile; horseback riding, X team; tenniquoit, Alpha Delta Phi; volleyball, X team; dancing. Pi Beta Phi; basketball. Delta Delta Delta; swimming, X team; and posture, Phi Omega Pi. Tennis and baseball have not been completed. In intramurals the hve highest in competition for the cup at the time the annual went to press were respectively: Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Xi Delta, Beta Phi Alpha, Chi Omega and Clovia. THE HONORARY TEAMS OF EACH SPORT ARCHERY Erma Jean Mil Marie Appel TENNIQUOIT (non-majorj Marjoric Blythe Feme Vesecky Telia Hinshaw Mae Gordon Katherine Reid Lorcna Schlemmer TENNIQUOIT (major) Lois Rosencrans Elizabeth Battersby Jane Swenson Esther Hobson Kathryn Black Betty Wagstaff VOLLEYBALL Opal Schlickau Esther Hobson Betty Wagstaff Ernestine Young Evelyn Young Justine Brening Mae Gordon BASKETBALL (non-major) Florence McKinney Justine Brening Mae Gordon Meredith Manion Alice White Edna Swank BASKETBALL (major) Kathryn Black Opal Schlickau Eva Brownewell Leora Light Cora Oliphant Helen Morgan SWIMMING Pauline Compton Mildred Forrester Ruth Dobson Katherine McKinney Jean Dexter POSTURE Cora Oliphant Helen Shedd Wanita Fry Velma French Ruth Meats Marcia Conrad oRGanizHTions ooH I nre Nioonli ht on The Kaw R ver ± .Ji. ri.oto ,:, . „,„,. M,u-h, M. Bluemont Walk, east from FairchiM Hall X3ZZIZ —.-fi: mi 1. Graham who governs the students, Manion. and athletics. 2. .John Lillian Munal Reinccke, editor and editoress of the Collegian. 3. Maxine and Mike in a state ot hypnotism. 4. Don ' t worry! Russell didn ' t lose his leg . . . he ' s just resting until football running season comes. 5. The Sig Ep ' s win hrst prize for Homecoming decorations. 6. Babe Uamon Davis readv for cla.ss during women ' s K initiation. 7. Mary Kendall (lirting with her paper napkin evelashes. 7. Cirter and Miller flying high. 8. The unlinked Reppert who prefers business managing to women . . . when there are no women around. 9. Brothers of the 1 Promise asylum . . . Fairbank and DuMars. 10. jay Kimball addnig Pi Kappa Delta to his activities. iriii tllltlM ' vl I. Nor a seat jn this stadium load. 2. Tlie head, hodv and tail of our White, Murphv, and Schlemmer horsie. 3, Kappas finding out whar there is in life. 4, I am Mark Kannal. 5. Skradski concocting a plan to pin Graham. 6. Ag. Queen and her artend- ants. 7. Al Wilson doing the last of his night work. 8. We don ' t blame you, Vinckiers, that sk ' scraper is hard to hold up. 9. Piano teacher showing his bars. 10. Porter, the Dclt. 11. Dea- con Moggie who traded his pin for a home town heart. 12. The Franklin Literary society on location. 13. Not an Osawatomie inmate but Dons Thompson. 14. The warm up of the Ags. Remember the Engineers who were thrown out. 15. Lawrence and Murdock make life hard even for a dog. 16. Girls in long pants at the Co-ed prom. 1. Jane Harman walks right out of a Lady Astor ad with her horse. 2. The doc line looking around for a ictini at the Ciold- digger ' s ball. 3. Mahatnia Xcseckv after decorating K. S. Sweetheart Reddy ' s arms. 4. Sir Harrv Lauder arriving in his .skirts to get a laugh. 5. Given playing Hay-seed with his admiring theater players. 6. John ' an A ken in the act of holding Solid South in his arms. J 4-H cKih banquet. 2. A view of the Roval Purple Sweethearts Ball. 3. The Tri-Delts playing angels in Aggie-Pop. 4. The Junior-Senior promcnadors anticipating the return of the Shepherd ' s Crook. 5. Senior Men ' s Panhellcnic. 6. The act which saved the Ag-Orpheuni. 7. The Sig Ep. locomotive for homecoming which failed to bring a victory over K. U. to the Manhattan station. 8. Doesn ' t Grace Umhergcr make a good looking escort to the little Kappa Silver Lady at the Aggie- Pop. 9, Anderson at night. 10. Female pirates of Ag-Orpheum. SENIOR MEN ' S PANHELLENIC OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER D. F. Pocock ------- Preiiileiit E. E. Criner E. E. Crincr -------- I ' lce-PresiJeiit - - - RL. Parker C. G. Ossmann ------ Stcrttary-Treasurer - - - - - -JR. Ketchersid MEMBERSHIP - W. B. Smith - H. W, Coherlv V. A. Elliot ■C. G. Ossmann E. E. Criner Acacia --------- Alpha Gamma Rho ------ Alpha Kappa Lambda ------ Alpha Rho Chi ------ - Alpha Tau Omega ------- Beta Theia Pi - L. A. Pearman Delta Sigma Phi - - F. W. Caldwell Delta Tau Delta --- Dqp Porter Farm House Walter M. Lewis Phi Kappa Lawrence Froelich Phi Kappa Tau - - - D. F. Pocock Phi Sigma Kappa - Pi Kappa Alpha Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Nu- Sigma Phi Epsilon - Tau Kappa Epsilon Lambda Chi Alpha Phi Lambda Theca- - R. L. Parker H. B. Hudiburg I. E. McDougal J- C. North James R- Ketchersid Robert Teagarden Glen Bovles H. G Holm Phi Delta Theta - - - Ernest Luder Theta Xi Leroy Heinshon — L. J- Hunter Kappa Sigma -.- S. G. Asbill Asbill HuJihurg Caldwell Munter Ossmann Froelich Heinshon Lewis McEDougal Porter Teagarden O FRESHMAN MEN ' S PANHELLENIC OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER Price Bcrr ' inan - _ - _ President - - - - - - - Mark Kannal Ralph Pauling - - - - - Vice-President - - - - - - - - Donald Licv Clarence Higdon - - - - Secretary-Treaiurer - - - MEMBERSHIP Victor Croskey Acacia Delta Tail Delta Pi Kappa Alpha Johling, George Lacy, Donald Campbell. William Metcalf, Elmer Diver, R. L. Farm House Rose, L.J. Alpha Gamma Rho Hanson, R. D. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Burson, Frank Ross, J. K. Berryman, Price Myers, C. W. Shideler, F.J. Lambda Chi Alpha Alpha Kappa Lambda Hardman, C. F. Sigma Nu Crist, Roy Priestley, W. P. Haynes, George Hill, Fred Phi Delta Theta Croskey, Victor Higdon, Clarence Alpha Rho Chi Rankin, Rex- Sigma Phi Epsilon Mallon, A. L. Phi Kappa Callahan, George Benjamin, K. W. Watts, W. D. Butterfield, David Alpha Tail Omega O ' Malley, James Tau Kappa Epsilon Morgan, Recce Phi Kappa Tau Brewer, Lee Pauling, Ralph Gallagher, M. W. Vandergriff, J. P. Hcrvey, Bill Beta Theta Pi Phi Lambda Theta Theta Xi Rhodes, H. E. Elaver F. H. Bean, Richard Schoolcraft, L. W. Thurston, W. W. Thvving, Emerson Delta Sigma Phi Phi Sigma Kappa Kappa Sigma Lewis, Milton Kannal, Mark Galley, Townsend Robinson, H. L. Wellemeyer, Fletcher Gripton, La Monte Bean Benjamin Berrvman Crist Cn.sLev Elaver Gallagher Gallev Gripton Hardman Haynes Higdon Hill l,.bl[ns Kannal Maxwell Metcall Mvers O-Mallev Pauhng Priestley Robinson ' Rost Thwing Todd Vandergnlf Wcllcmcy. SCARAB QCARAB is an organization of senior men, founded at Kansas State College in 1914. Fraternity representatives are elected bv the group each vear to foster better campus politics. OFFICERS Ivan McDougal --....._... President L. R. Daniels ------ - - - . . Vice-President Stephen Veseckv ---------- Secretary L. A. Pearman --. Treasurer Acacia -----E. O. Merlcley Alpha Gamma Rho Gaylord Munson Alpha Tau Omega - Lee Morgan Alpha Rho Chi F. H. Kennedy L. A. Pearman Beta Theta Pi Win uu y Jack Householder Delta Sigma Phi C. H. Catch Lambda Chi Alpha Ward Col well „,.„,-, f Don Wyatt Phi Delta Theta r- q ■Carl Sartonus Phi Kappa F. T. McMahon Phi Kappa Tan -....-. John Woolcott .John Meyers Phi Sigma Kappa clwi ' ' [ Stephen Vesecky Pi Kappa Alpha Gene Ellis Sigma Alpha Epsilon Ivan McDougal Sigma Nu Harry Hasler «■D c I L.R.Daniels Sigma Phi hpsilon  « • t m- ' ( Maurice DuMars Theta Xi C.J. Woodley Kappa Sigma L. W. Teall Farm House Harold Kugler Vesecky Woolcott Meyers Woocilev Kennedy HouscholJer Sartorius DuMar; McDousal Danick PAX Junior Men ' s Panhellenic political organization founded in 1923. • OFFICERS J. C. Richards PrtuJmt Cecil Miller - - - Vnt-Presultnt Nelson Reppert Stcretiiry-Treasiirer Acacia Brown, Henrv Kerr, M. D. Alpha Gamma Rho Coberly, Harry W. Sundgren, E- E Alpha Rho Chi Crawford, W. O. Erdtmann, George Alpha Tail Omega Hibhs, H. C. Matthews, M. G. Beta Theta Pi Miller, Cecil Uinberger, D. Delta Sigma Phi Caldwell, F. W. Othberg, R. C. MEMBERSHIP Farm House Murphey, C. E. Pine, W. H. Kappa Sigma Asbill, Stephen G. Gomez, F. D. Lambda Chi Alpha Creed,]. F. Dole, W. L. Phi Delta Theta Hughes, C. E. Luder, Ernest Phi Kappa Richards,,]. C. Wempe, Lillis Phi Kappa Tau Lemon, G. H. Nelson, N. A. Phi Lambda Theta Lundberg, V. F. Stocklasa, E. J. Phi Sigma Kappa Grass, H. W. Murphy, L. E. Pi Kappa Alpha Hamilton, R. H. Harris. K. W. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Moreen, H. A. Reppert, Nelson Sigma Nu Doolittle, H. H. Keller, W, F. Sigma Phi Epsilon Harter, K. W. Ketchersid, J. R. Theta Xi Heinsohn, R. L. Hemkcr, K. M. Brown Coherly Grass Hamilton Harter Hibhs Hughes Kerr Kel xhci -Sid Matthews Miller Moreen Murphy Reppert Richards Umberger Wempe ACACIA Fou nded 1904, University of Michigan. Kansas State ch ipter installed 1913. MEMBERSHIP Farrell M. Bozarth, Ag. E A Lenora James Morse, C 2 Manhattan Edwin Brown, IC 4 Fall River Gilbert G. Noble, CE 3 Lyons Henr M. Brown, Ag. 2 Marshall Caughron, C 3 Glen F. Egan, CE 2 Robert C. Eychner, CE 4 Fall River Manhattan Altamont Jewell Rufiis G. Obrecht, Grad. Charles J. Prchal, VM 4 Ben Sellers, CE 3 Topeka Manhattan Lyons Jean E. Hemphill, GS 1 Clay Center Ralph F. Shaner, VM 4 Topeka L. Lymon Henderson, VM 2 Manhattan W. Bruce Smith, ME 4 Hoisington George L. Jobling, CE 2 Manhattan Dean E. Swift, CE 3 Olathe George M. Kerr, VM 2 Washington Ansel Tobias, Ag. E 2 Lyons Elmer L. Metcaif, VM 1 Manhattan Richard D. Turk, VM 4 Manhattan Everil O. Mcrkley, VM 4 Manliattan Maxwell P. Wann, GS 1 Manhattan MRS ELLA LYLES 340 NORTH SI.XTEENTH STREET Bozarth Hobson Brown. E. Johhng Smith Brown, H, Caughron Kerr Mcrkley Metcalf Swift Turk Eythner Obrecht Hawk Prchal Wells OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Richard D. Turk - - President Walter Bruce Smith V ' lce-Pnsidcnt Robert C. E) ' chner- ------ Secretary Rufus G. Obrecht Trcusiirer SECOND SEMESTER Elmer L. Metcall - George M. Kerr Gilbert G. Noble - Dean Swift ALPHA GAMMA RHO Founded April 14, 1908, University of Illinois. Alpha Zeta chapter installed February 12, 1927. Marcus L. Bergsten, VM 3 Thomas Bond, VM 4 Ci Wavne Burbank, Ag. 3 Frank B. Burson, AA 3 Richard H. Campbell, Ag. 3 Harry Coberly, Ag. 3 Monroe Coleman, Ag. 1 Carl C. Conger, Ag. 4 Lloyd Davies, Ag. 1 Kermit Davies, Ag. 1 Floyd Davidson, Ag. 3 Dale Edleblute, Ag. 3 Andrew Elson, Ag. 4 L. K. Firth, VM 4 J. Edwin Gantenbine, Ag. 3 Charles Gentz, Ag. 3 J. L. Hakl, VM 4 C. Johnson Hook, VM 2 Joe F. Knappenberger, VM 2 Ben C. Kohrs, Ag. 3 MEMBERSHIP Cleburne Milton Kohrs, Ag. I Elmo niberland, Iowa Edward Lamb, Ag. 2 Manhattan Wichita Horace Lamborn, Ag. 1 Leavenworth Monument J. Elbert Loveless, AA 4 Benton, Texas Grenola George L. McColm, Ag. 2 Emporia Gove J. Edwin McColm, Ag. 1 Emporia Sylvia Robert!. McLean, VM 4 ElCajon, Cal. Manhattan Robert Miller, Ag. 1 Lawrence Emporia Alvin Mistier, Ag. 1 Leavenworth Emporia Gaylord Munson, Ag. 4 Junction City Madison Charles Myers, g. 1 Bancroft Keats Richard New, Ag. 2 Leavenworth Kansas City Marion Nolan, Ag. 2 Falls City, Neb. Cowgill, Mo. Elmo Hope Stanton, Neb. Carl Schumaker, Ag. 2 Pomona Luke M. Schruben, Ag. 4 Dresden William Snodgrass, VM4, Anchorage, Alaska Bravmer, Mo. Eugene Sundgren, Ag. 2 Falun Penalosa Willet Taylor, Ag. 3 Lawrence Elmo Lester Zerbe, Ag. 1 Salina MRS. CHARLES F. KIPFER 1521 LEAVENWORTH STREET Davidson McLean Burson Firth Myers Campbell Knappenberger Schruben Coberly Loveless Sundgren OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER G. R- Munson Vreudtnt H. W. Coberly Vui-Pr,udtni T. L. Bond -------- Sucntary F. K- Davidson - - Trcamnr SECOND SEMESTER G. R. Munson H. W. Coberlv - T. L. Bond F. E. Davidson ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA Founded 1914, University of California, Berkeley-. Iota chapter installed 1930. L. Richard Burdge, ME 3 Donald C. Christy, Ag. E 4 David S. Crippcn, EE 2 Roy D. Christ, Ag. E 2 Raymond J. Dicken, Ag. 2 A. Roland Elliott, GS 2 V ' orras A. Elliott, ME 3 T. Franklin Emerson, EE 1 John M. Hamon, Ag. 4 Frederick W. Hill, C 2 Nc Sylvester H. Keller, Ag. E 4 Clarence E. Keith, AA 3 Howard M. Kindsvater, IC 3 Warren P. Lyttle, EE 4 R. Harold McElroy, CE 4 R. Edwin Mariner, ME 3 Philip R. Miller, CE 3 ME.MBERSHIP Parsons Roland A. Munscll, Ag. 1 Sedwick Scott City Sidney B. North, C4 Coffeyville Council Grove Alvin G. Ploger, AA 3 Kinsley Brewster J. Warren Rowland, C 1 Clay Center Winfield Carl Rupp, Ag. 3 Moundridge Stafford Edwin Sample, Ag. 1 Council Grove McPherson Carl W. Schnell, C 2 New York, N. Y. Wellington Louis J. Smith, CE4 Neodesha Valley Falls James B. Stephenson, CE 4 Sedan w York, N. Y. Newton Theron F. Sturdy, GS 1 Paul B. Vautravers, GS 3 Harper Centralia Ottawa Wichita Dale Vawter, ME 4 Liberty Council Grove William T. Walters, CE 3 Manhattan Randall Walbur Wahl, Ag. 4 Wheaton Fredonia Re.x V. Woodward, EE 4 Medicine Lodge Wells Glenn M. Young, EE 2 Kansas City MRS. H.- RRIET K EVERLY 307 NORTH SIXTEENTH STREET riRST SEMESTER Donald Christy Vorras A. Elliott - Philip R. Miller - Rex V. Woodward Fresiilent - Vice-President - Secretary TreasJirer SECOND SEMESTER -Warren P. Lvttle Sylvester H. Keller Vorras A. Elliott Howard Kindsvater -- s t! ALPHA RHO CHI Founded April 11, 1914, University of Illinois. Paeonios chapter installed February 10, 1925. : MEMBERSHIP DonaM M. Bammes, Ar. E 1 Manhattan Ray E. Lippenbergcr, Ar. 1 Charles Beal, Ar. 2 Ayoca, N. Y. Fort Morgan, Colo. Ulrich W. Busch, Ar. 3 Wa shington. Mo. Albert Mallon, Ag. 1 Anthony Wade O. Crawford, Ar. E 3 Manhattan Arthur R. Munns, Ar. E 3 Kansas City George R. Crossen, ME 4 Turner Carl G. Ossmann, Ar. E 4 Concordia Richard J. Crowley, Ar. 4 Manhattan L. E. Roberts, MEd. 2 Ogden George Erdtmann, PE 2 Ellswotth Phillip Roclcwood,C 4 Parker William Erdtmann, PE 1 Ellsworth R. A. Schober, Ar. 4 Manhattan Kenneth Hinkle, Ar. 3 Nayare Lyle W. Streets, Ar. E 2 Silonie Springs, Ark. Oscar S. Ekdahl, Ar. 4 Manhattan Ellis Wampler, Ar. E2 Wichita Floyde N. Kennedy, Ar. E 4 Anthony Winston D. Watts, C 1 Pratt MRS. BERTH. ' !, NAPIER 1020 HOUSTON STREET Beal Kennedy Crossen Ekdahl Ossmann Erdtmann, G. Rockwood Erdtmann, W. Songer OFFICERS nRST SEMESTER Carl G. Ossmann ------- President Oscar S. Ekdahl Vice-President Ulrich W. Busch - Secretary Floyde N. Kennedy Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER - Carl G. Ossmann Floyde N. Kennedy Charles L, Beal Winston D. Watts ALPHA TAU OMEGA Founded September 11, 1865, Virginia Military Institute. Delta Theta chapter installed October 23, 1920. MEMBERSHIP Bartlett V. .-Mien, GS 2 Artluir Attuood, IC 4 Crawford Becson, IC 3 Wesley H. Brinkman, C 4 John S. Biggs, CE 3 Kenneth Brubaker, C 2 Edward E. Criner, C 4 Clarence Crawford, GS 1 A. H. L. Daman, VM 2 Carl Eagan, C 2 Stephen Dclladio, EE 3 Louis G. Elser, CE 4 Harold Hibbs, Ar. E 3 Maurice Haas, Ch. E 1 Marvin Hanson, ME 1 Maurice Hanson, ME 1 Manhattan Randolph Wamego Manhattan Washington, D. C. Hugoton Wichita Lurav Salina Goodland Frontenac Ft. Riley Osborne Ellin wood Newton Newton James Latucky, ME 2 James LeClere, PE 2 Merton Mathews, C 2 Lee T. Morgan, Ag. 2 Reece Morgan, Ar. E 3 Robert F. Owen, GS 3 Richard R. Owen, GS 3 Ralph Pauling, GS 1 W. B. Purviance, GS 1 James Rc.xroad, GS 3 Dougal Russell, PE 3 Lloyd Riggs, IJ 1 Lvic Schaefli, CE 2 Ward Shurtz, EE 2 Robert W. Spiker, C 3 Fred White, VM 2 Westbury Coffey ville Manhattan Hugoton Hugoton Ft. Riley Ft. Riley Manhattan Milford Hutchinson McDonald, Penn. Manhattan Cawker City Manhattan Manhattan Manhattan MRS. D, B. KINNIBURGH 1450 FAIRCHILD STREET i A Page ISS 4anson, M E. Morgan. R. Bccson Biges Delladio Daman Eagan Hibbs Latucky LeClerc Pauling RexroaJ R-iggs MatheM Shurtz Brubaker Haas Mayer White FlRSl SEMESTER Arthur Attwtiod Ll-c Morgan - Robert Spikcr Edward Criticr Pre uJciit Vicc-Prciulait Sco ' cttiry SECOND SEMESTER Edward Criner - Lee Morgan Arthur Daman Kenneth Hruhaker BETA THETA PI Founded 1839, Miami Universitv, Oxford, Ohio. Gamma Epsilon chapter installed October 14, 1914. MEMBERSHIP Mark Babb, GS 4 Lebanon Dan Partner, IJ 1 ElDorado Jack Boyd, C 2 Topeka Lormor Pearman, C 4 Hoi ton Franklin Colladay, ME 2 Hutchinson Ma.x Pfuetze, GS 1 Manhattan Arthur Cain, GS 1 Leavenworth Hardy Prentice, EE 2 Clay Center Wallace Duncan, Ar. 4 Topeka Howard Rhoads, CE 2 Arkansas City Paul Fairbank, PE 4 Topeka Ned Samuel, Ag. 3 Manhattan William Fitch, MEd. 2 Manhattan Wicks Schoolcraft, GS 1 Fredonia James Foulds, ME 3 Hutchinson Richard Seaton, IJ 3 Manhattan Donald Hutchinson, C 3 Hutchinson Robert Stephenson, GS 2 Holton Edward Kelly, GS 3 Manhattan Edward Stone, C 3 Manhattan Elva Kennedy, VM 4 Chase Burdette Stratford, C 3 ElDorado Ned Kimball, GS 2 Manhattan Oren Stoner, PE 2 Sabetha Charles Manley, GS Junction City Charlie Team, Ag. 2 Wichita Cecil Miller, C 3 Lyons Dave Umberger, CE 2 Manhattan Donald Miller, GS 2 Cambridge, Nebr. John VanAken, IC 3 Lyons Edward Murphy, VM 1 Kansas City Joyce Wright, EE 3 Topeka MRS. ELIZABETH SHEETS li i Eddington Murphy Stephenson OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Richard Seaton Prtudtm Richard Scaton John Van A ken - Vuc-Frrs:de :t John Van Al cn Donald Miller Secretary - - . . ' ■. . . Donald Miller Lorinor Pcarman Treasurer ■Lormor Pearniaii DELTA SIGMA PHI Founded 1899, University of the City of New York. Alpha Upsilon chapter installed January 30, 1925. MEMBERSHIP Lewis H. Bacon, Ag. 4 Svlvan Grove Willard Parker, Ag. 2 Clearwater Clyde Beckman, C 2 Randolph H. Louis Robinson, Ch. E 3 Cimarron Floyd W. Cald«ell,CE4 Parsons William Schade, ME 1 Manhattan Raymond Chaffee, Ag. 1 Talmadge E. L. Simms, PE 4 Republic Clarence Gatch, C 3 Woodbine W. R. Smith, Ag. 4 Manhattan W. C. Hinkle, Ag. E 4 Lenora Charles Stewart, Ag. E 3 Hunter Everett Hinz, ME 3 . bilene Charles Stull, EE 4 Osborne Martin F. Kcclc, Ag. 4 Kansas City, Mo. W. E. Turtle, C 1 Hunter Milton Lewis, C 1 Bavaria E. L. Wells, CE 4 Meriden H. Deane Munal, GS 1 Memphis, Tenn. William L. Wheelock, Ch. E 1 Pleasanton Clifford E. Newell, EE 4 Manhattan M. Waldo Wilcox, CE 3 Wichita Richard C. Othberg, EE 2 Scandia Harold B. Wright, Ch. E 4 Hutchinson MRS. ELLIE CHAFFIN 1707 LARAMIE STREET FIRST SEMESTER Martin F. Keck - E. L. Wells - - Clarence Gatch - Floyd W. Caldwell Pnudmt Vice-PicstJctn Sccrettiry Trcsnrtr SECOND SEMESTER - Martin F. Keck - - E. L. Wells - Clarence Gatch Flovd W. Caldwell DELTA TAU DELTA Founded February, 1859, Bethany College, West Virginia. Gamma Chi chapter installed June 6, 1919. Richard Armstrong, PE 2 Max Bickford, GS 4 William Blowers. C 3 Harry Brandon, C 3 Clarence Canary, Ch. E 1 Robert Chambers, Ch. E 1 Randal Diver, ME 1 Ralph Exline, CE 3 Homer French, GS 4 Dale Gambcr, C 2 Frank Gro ' es, C 2 John Hensley, VM 3 Donald Isaacson, Ag. 2 Rex. Jennings, C 4 Joel Kcsler, EE 4 Clark Kostner, C 3 Donald Lacey, C 1 John Lceper, Ag. 1 Donald McNeal, IJ 1 MEMBERSHIP Riley Milo Oberhelman, GS 3 Randolph Phillipsburg Donald Porter, C 2 Mt. Hope Kansas City Arnold Purtzer, CE 2 Netawaka Osawatomie Lawrence Reed, Ag. E 4 Manhattan Manhattan Claude Ross, Ch. E 1 Dover Hutchinson Harold Ross, C 2 Wamego Chanute Joe Saip, C 1 Belleville Salina L. N. Schowengerdt, C 2 Osawatomie ' retty Prairie Leon Sealey, Ch. E 3 Salina Culver Laurence Seyh, GS 4 Pretty Prairie Atchison Andrew Skradski, GS 4 Kansas City Valeio, Cal. Carl Smith, C2 Dodge City Topeka Russell Smith, ME 4 Manhattan Hoyt Arthur Tellejohn, VM 2 Kansas City Overbrook Herman Tietzc, C 3 Kansas City Kingman Verne Warner, GS 2 Osawatomie Herington Harold Weathers, CE 3 Haviland Topeka Russell Webb, C 3 Hardtner Boyle Alfred Wilson, CE 4 Valley Center MISS MARY ANN COLLINS 1224 FREMONT STREET Armstrong Bickford French Camber Porter McNeal Sealey Scyb Blowers Brandon Groves Jennings Reed Rhodes Smith Tellejohn riRST SEMESTER Russell Smith - Donald Isaacson Lawrence Seyb Rex Jennings - Prisidfiit Vice-Pnsitiotr Secretary Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER Harold Ross Harold Weathers Arthur Tellejohn John Hcnsle ' FARM HOUSE Founded 1905, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Kansas chapter installed June 2, 1921. Wayne Beitler, Ag. 2 Vernon E. Burnet, Ag. 3 Gordon A. Carter, Ag. 1 Lester R. Chilson, Ag. 4 Herbert W. Clutter, Ag. 4 Donald E. Comp ton, GS 3 Earl E. Coulter, .Ag. 4 Kenneth S. Davis, Ag. 3 Phares Decker, Ag. 4 Louis S. Evans , Ag. 2 Charles E. Fisher, Ag. 4 Glenn S. Fox, Ag. 4 Clarence L. Gish, Ag. 3 David Gregory, Ag. 1 Louis Hanson, Ag. 3 Lawrence G. Harmon, Ag. 2 Robert H. Holmes, Ag 1 Wayne W. Jacobs, . g 3 William H. Juri, . g. 2 Harold L. Kugler, Ag. 4 Alvin E. Lowe, Ag. 4 Walter M. Lewis, Ag. 2 J. Warren Mather, Ag. 3 MEMBERSHIP Coldwater John O. Miller, Ag. 3 Meriden Atlanta Charles E. Murphey, Ag. 2 Leoti Bunker Hill Rovce P. Murphy, Ag. 1 Norton Oberlin J. Lowell Myler, Ag. 1 Andover Earned Nevlyn R. Nelson, Ag. 3 Belle Plaine Manhattan Herbert T. Niles, Ag. 3 Olivet Willis Shelby M. Neelly, PE 4 Hopewell Manhattan C. Gross Page, Ag. 4 Norton Holton W. Newell Page, Ag. 4 Detroit Washington Wilfred H. Pine, Ag. 3 Lawrence Cuba Arden B. Rinehart, Ag. 1 Greensburg Rozel George A. Rogler, Ag. 2 Matheld Green Abilene Dale Romine, Ag. 2 Oswego Cheney John K. Ross, IJ 1 Timken Jamestown Jean W. Scheel, IJ 4 Emporia Hutchinson Arthur C. Thomson, Ag. 4 McCune Wichita Willis A. Thomson, VM 3 McCune Harper Dwight Thompson, Ag. 3 Wichita Florence Kenneth Thompson, M Ed. 2 Wichita Abilene Ned O. Thompson, Ag. 1 Manhattan Argonia R. Penn Thompson, . g. 4 Manhattan Earned Marvin E. Vautravers, Ag. 4 Centralia Grinnell Kellv Wilcox, Ag. 1 Jamestown MRS. PEARL GR. MMON 1409 FAIRCHILD STREET iM £i ' Li Burnet Carter Chilson Fox Cish Harmon Lowe Miller Murphey Page. G. Page. N, Pine Clutter Compton Davis Jacobs Juzi Myler Neelly Ross Scheel Thompsoi Decker Fisher Kugler Lewis Nelson Niles Thomson Vautravers OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Glenn S. Fox Prmdmr Herbert W. Clutter Vice-Prei,dc„t Harold L. Kugler Semtary C. Gross Page Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER - Glenn S. Fox Herbert W. Clutter - Harokl L. Kugler C. Gross Page KAPPA SIGMA Founded December 10, 1869, University of ' irginia. Gamma Chi chapter installed June 7, 1919. MEMBERSHIP Stephen Asbill, VM 2 Dixon, Cal. Warren Bailey, Ar. 1 New Hampton, la. Lynn Berry, CE 4 Manhattan Max Burk, IJ 2 Manhattan Gilbert Campbell, GS 2 McCracken Garlie Collins, Grad. Wellsville, Okla. Evan Davis, Ar. 2 Topeka Olin Ediger, CE 3 Newton Hubert Feckner, VM 2 Manhattan Don Fullmer, CE 2 Elkhart Townsend Galley, CE 1 Newton George Gill, IC 3 Raymond Don Gomez, VM 3 Manhattan LaMonte Gripton, IC 1 Smith Center Dorsey Hancks, GS 1 Wamego Harry Hancks, MEd. 1 Wamego Charles Hardman, Ch. E 1 Anthony Carl Hollidav, C 4 Kansas City George Hoopingarner, Ag. 1 Manter Leslie King, FME 2 Wichita Hayes Ludvickson, C 2 Severy Herbert McCoIlom, CE 3 Dodge City Hal McCord, . r. E 4 Manhattan Max M. McCord, GS 1 Manhattan Fred Peerv, IJ 4 Manhattan John Rader, CE 3 Smith Center Worth Ross, GS 1 Manhattan Leland Shaffer, C 2 Minneola Lisle Smelser, CE 4 Manhattan Herman Sunderland, CE 3 Fairview Whitney Teall, CE 4 Earned Otis Thompson, GS 2 Dodge City Jess Van Sant, VM 1 Dixon, Cal. Wilfred Wallace, ME 3 Augusta Ben Winchester, PE 1 Kinsley MRS. J. W. AMIS •iiq NORTH ELE ENTH STREET Asbrll Bailuv Burk Davis Ediger Englcr Fcchncr Fullmer Galley Gill Gouge Gripton Hancks Hardman Holliday Hoopingarner King Lake McCord. H. McCord, M. Mace Ross Smelser Sunderland Teall Thompson Van Sant W inchester HRST SEMESTER Carl E. Holliday - Herbert McCollom Evan Davis Olin Ediger OFFICERS  SECOND SEMESTER Pnsiilint - - - •-- - - - Whitney Teall Vict-Prisidrtit Leslie King Secretary ------ Hayes Ludvickson Treasurer Olin Ediger LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Founded November 2, 1909, Boston Universitv. Gamma Xi Zeta chapter installed April 5, 1924. MEMBERSHIP Clifford Alcorn, CE 3 Carbondale Jay Kimball, C 2 Manhattan Glen Boyles, Ag. 2 Manhattan Don Nutter, IJ 3 Republic Ward Cohvell, IJ 4 Onaga Edv ■in Orrick, CE 3 Topeka Wilbur Combs, EE 2 Bartlesville, Okla. William P. Priestiv, C I Paola Joe Creed, PE 2 Bartlesville, Okla. Guilford Railsback, IJ 4 Langdon Collins Crum, Ar. E 1 Onaga Hugh Roth, CE Ness City William Dole, CE 3 Almena Foster Scott, IJ 4 Manhattan Archie French, EE 3 Augusta James Scott, EE 3 Kansas City, Mo. Eldred L. Gann, Grad. Burden Clifford Scott, GS 3 Norway Don ald G. Gentry, CE 3 Manhattan Leonard Sweene , ' M 3 Omaha, Nebr. Bernard Geraghty, EE 4 Selden Virgil Siddens, Ar. 2 Manhattan Boyce Hard man, GS 1 Hill City Roy B. Smith, PE 4 Council Grove Paul Hardman, EE 1 Hill City Robert Vaupel, C 4 New Cambria Evan Haughawout, IJ 2 Onaga Frank Volek, Ag. E 1 Ringo David Hays, IJ 3 Manhattan Donald M. Williams, GS 4 Manhattan William P. Justus, IJ 1 Hill City Joe E. Woodford, ME 4 Salina MRS. F. E. H.- WTHORNE 1221 THURSTON STREET Boyles French Scott. C. QjIwcII Combs Creed Gentry Geraghty Hardman, B. Hardman. P Kimball Nutter Orrick Priestley Scott. F. Scott. J. Siddens Sweeney I laughawout Railsback WiM.ams Roth Vaupel OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Hugh Roth - Pyiuilint - - William Dole Jay Kimball Vm-Prt.uJmt .lav Kimball Guilford Railsback ' ScmiM-y ' - ' - 15aviJ Havs loc Crccti Treiiwrtr .|oe Creed PHI DELTA THETA Founded 1848, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Kansas Gamma chapter installed February 25, 1921. MEMBERSHIP Julius Anderson, Ar. 3 Cecil Arens, EE 3 Francis Boyd, IJ 3 Victor Croskey, CE 1 George Davidson, Ar. 3 Milton Ehrlich, C 4 Frank Ford, CE 1 William Fuller, ME 1 Orrin Grover, IC 4 Howard Hartman, ME 2 Otis Horchem, C 4 Everett Hughes, C 3 Harold Jewell, VM 2 Bernard Johnson, C 3 Donald Landon, IC 3 Ernest Luder, C 2 Center, Tex. Topeka Phillipsburg Kansas City Kansas City, Mo. Marion Eureka Ponca City, Okla. Manhattan Hoisingtoii Ransom Stockton Great Bend Olsburg Topeka Caldwell E. B. McCormick, OS 3 Manhattan James Nichols, VM 3 Superior, Neb. Orville Nuffer, C 4 Leonardville Rex Rankin, GS 1 Corning Carl Sartorius, IC 4 Garden City William Schorer, C 1 Clvde Herbert Schrepel, GS 1 Hoisington Edwin Smith, Ar. 1 Stockton Ravmond Spilman, Special Manhattan Homer Tavlor, GS 3 Topeka Sherman Todd, Ag. 2 Olathe William Waddell, VM 2 St. Joseph, Mo. Frank Wilkeson, Ag. 1 Silina John Wilcox, . g. 1 Lawrence Donald Wyatt, IJ 4 Stockton MRS. R. G. TAYLOR 928 LEAVEMVORTH STREET 35 y 1 OFFICERS F.RST SEMESTER ■™° SEMESTER Everett Hughes Pyes.Jon -------- Don La.idon Francis Boyd V,c,-P,c:dc,„ - - - - - - -Howard Hartman Howard Hartman Stcritary Orrin Grovcr OrvilleNuffcr Trtauirtr James Nichols PHI KAPPA Founded 1889, Brown University, Providence, R. I. Iota chapter installed April 9, 1921. MEMBERSHIP Wayne Callahan, EE 3 Coffevville Joseph P. Murphv, C 3 Schenectadv, N. Y. Joe Cavanaugh, VM 2 Esbon James O ' Mallev, Ch, E 3 S . Joseph, Mo. James D. Corrigan, C4 Holyrood Elmer Petsch, ME 4 Manhattan John Donnelly, ME 3 Manhattan James Richards, Ch. E Manhattan Morton Fitzmorris, CE 2 Fredonia Kenneth Sadler, VM 2 Seneca Wayne Fitzmorris, ME 1 John Florell, Ar. 4 Fred on i a Manhattan Phil Schneider, C 1 Beattie Lawrence Froelich, C 3 Abilene Martin Scihel, CE 3 Ellis William Gilligan, PE 2 Schenectadv, N. Y. John Stone, EE 4 Leavenworth T. F. McMahon, CE 4 Beattie Lillis Wempc, VM 2 Seneca Charles Murphy, iC 2 Clyde Leonard Zerull, EE 2 Ellis MRS. ANN KILEY 1909 ANDERSON STREET i Callahan Froelich Richards Corngan Gilligan Sadler Donnelly Fitzmorris. C. McMahon Seibel Murphy Wempe Florell O ' Malley ZeruU OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER James Corrigan President James Corrigan James Richards Vice-President ------- James Richards Leonard Zeruli Secretary - - - - ;- - - Leonard Zeru II Lawrence Froelich Treasurer - • - - - - Lawrence Froelich PHI KAPPA TAU Founded March 17, 1906, Miami L ' niversitv, Oxford, Ohio. Alpha Epsilon chapter installed May 23, 1925. MEMBERSHIP F. A. Brandenburg, . A 4 Ben Butler, VM 1 M. L. Carter, IC 3 V. S. Cohlentz, Ag. 3 G. R. Collier, EE 4 W. B. Davis, CE 3 L. Darnell, GS 3 M. W. Gallagher, GS 2 H. V. Ganstrom, . r. 4 H. C. Johnson, FME 3 L. H. Johnson, CE 1 K. O. Lassen, VM 2 G. H. Lemon, IC 3 W. B. Martin, CE 1 N. R. Meek, GS 4 Rilcy Phoenix, Ariz. Smith Center Great Bend Colwich Burr Oak Osborne Wellington Hollis Marquette Talmo Phoenix, . riz. Manhattan Wichita Phoenix, Ariz. N. A. Nelson, C 3 P. A. Neuschwangcr, EE 2 M. Pearce, Ag. 4 Ivan Phetteplace, Ch. E 1 D. F. Pocock, C 4 M. R. Rover, CE 4 N. Sollenberger, CE 3 H. H. Stark, FME 2 E. G. Stoskopf, ME 4 Jennings Osborne Miltonvale Smith Center LeRoy Newton Manhattan Wellington Baxter Springs L. G. Stukey, EE 3 Steamboat Springs, Colo. W. A. Talbott, GS 3 Wichita J. P. Vandergriff, GS 2 Douglass W. B. Warner, EE 2 Wellington J. P. Woolcott, FME 4 Harrisburg, III. MRS. C. E. REID 417 NORTH SEVENTEENTH STREET Brandenburg Butler Carter Colher Davis Gallagher Ganstro Johnson. L. Johnson, H. Lassen Martir Murphv Nelson Pearce Phettepli Pocock Stark Stoskopf Stukey Vandergriff Warner Woolcoi OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER D. F. Pocock President J. P. Woolcott Vice-President M. L. Carter -------- Secretary N. A. Nelson Treasure ' SECOND SEMESTER - j. P. Woolcott Norman Sollenberger M. L. Carter - N. A. Nelson PHI LAMBDA THETA Founded November IS, 1920, Penns ' s ' lvania State College. Beta chapter installed April 29, 1923. MEMBERSHIP R. E. Cole, IJ 3 .Alton H G. Love, Ag. 4 Wilsev J. W. Coate, IC 2 Miltonvale V F. Lundberg, EE 3 Falun F. H. Elayer, Ar. E 1 Manhattan T. E. Martin, .Ag. E 4 Manhattan W. G. Fundis, Ag. 1 Lero)- A E. Mavhew, CE 2 Belpre T. E. Hall, Ag. 4 Manhattan L. K. Mock, ME 2 Osborne G. W. Hartcr, CE 1 Sabetha R. A. Paige, IJ 3 Manhattan H. R. Hein, Ag. 4 H. C. Holm, Ag. 4 J. M. Hurd. VM 3 Washington Dwight Pawnee Citv, Nebr. .1- C M. Raven, Ag. 4 G. Roehrman, PE 2 Morrowvillc White City E. R. Jensen, EE 4 Herington w A. Sells, EE 4 Effingham R. C. Jensen, VM 3 Herington w R, Stewart, EE 4 Lowemont I. M. Johnson, EE 4 Sniolan E. J. Stoklasa, VM 2 Clarkson, Nebr. E. I. Largcnt, C 4 Oak Hill W W. Thurston, EE 2 Elmdale MRS. CHARLES HEER 1623 FAIRCHILD STREET Elayer Love Hall Lundberg Hurd Stewart Largent Thurston OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER W. R. Stewart PrcsiJcnr H. C Holm Vice-President V. A. Sells Secretary J. M. Raven Treasurer E. 1. Largent - W. W. Thurston - L. K. Mock J. M. Raven PHI SIGMA KAPPA Founded Marc h 15, 1873, Massachusetts State College. Iota Deutcron chapter installed March 24, 1923- MEMBERSHIP James M. Andie, VM 1 Kansas City, Mo. Earl Maydcn, GS 3 Manhattan Kenneth Banks, GS 1 Gypsum Bob Neihardt, CE 2 Lyndon Victor Cavin, EE 4 LaCrosse John W. Meyers, GS 4 Kansas City Dale Dixon, GS 3 Norcatur John G. Mogge, GS 4 Goodland Don Fox, Ch. E 3 Longford Leslie E. Murphv, ME 3 W ishington, D. C. Hatty W. Gtass.Jt., AA 2 LaCrosse James Neville, CE 4 Coffevville letome Hatshaw, GS 1 Manhattan E. M. Newman, CE 4 LaCrosse John L. Hattnian, ME 3 Omaha, Neb. Lane Nicholas, GS 1 Manhattan Leonard Hibbs, VM 3 Upland, CaL R. L. Parker, AA 3 Kansas City Myton Hicks, GS 2 Norcatur Jake Reineccius, VM 4 Creston, Neb. Mark Kannal, GS 1 Kansas City John Reinecke, GS 4 Great Bend Oscar Kent, GS 3 Monroe, Mich. Paul Rust, AA 1 Junction City Warren Larson, GS 3 Manhattan Stephen Vesecky, A.A 4 Kansas City W. H. Lindley, VM 4 Vicksburg, Miss. J. Fletcher Wellemeyer, GS 3 Kansas City MRS. E. L. TAYlJiR firii IS hit IPIO HUMBOLDT STREET 1 Andie Harshaw Lindley Parker Banks Hartman Mayden Hibbs Meyers Reinecke Dixon Kannai Murphy Rust Fox Kent Newman Vesecky Niehol, Welh OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Stephen Vesecky President Earl Mayden Vur-Preuilmt John Reinecke Secritary Dale Dixon Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER - Dale Dixon - Leonard Hibbs - John Reinecke - Harry W. Grass, Jr. PI KAPPA ALPHA Founded March 1, 1868, University of ' irginia. Alpha Omega chapter installed June 9, 1913. MEMBERSHIP Jack- Biehcr, C 2 Frank Brown, Ij 2 Vernon Brubaker, C 3 William Campheil, Ar E Wayne Cantral, CE 4 John Carr, Ar. 3 Donald Collins, CE 3 James Edwards, PE 1 Gene Ellis, CE 4 Gene Enlow, EE 2 James Epperson, C 3 Max Fockele, C 4 Donald Green, CE 3 Phillip Hacknev, Ag 2 Lyman Hall, C 4 Frank Hamilton, CE 2 Richard Hamilton, EE 2 Russell Hanna, GS 1 Kenneth Harris, IC 3 Osborne Kansas Citv, Mo. Abilene Independence Manhattan Salina Junction City Manhattan Council Grove Topeka Hutchinson Ottawa Independence Wellington Manhattan Norton Washington Manhattan Kansas Citv, Mo. Howard Hudiburg, Ch. Charles Maxwell, CE 1 Dale Maxwell, CE 2 William Maxwell, C2 Howard May, CE 1 Lloyd Michael, VM 3 Dean McNeal, A A 3 Roy Miller, VM 3 Charles Moore, C 2 Hayden Phillips, C 3 Paul Rayburn, C 4 Sidney Robinson, C 3 Leland Rose, EE 3 Arthur Scott, Ar. E 4 Grover Steele, Ag. 2 Charles Stutz, IC 1 Charles Vinckier, CE 3 Dent Walker, C 4 E3 Independence Columbus Columbus Manhattan Kansas Citv Eudora Boyle Atlantic, la. Manhattan Salina Newton Parsons Council Grove Pittsburg Barnes Manhattan Kansas City, Mo. Anthony MRS. C. H. OLES 331 NORTH SEVENTEENTH STREET Ancenen r Bieber Carbiener Ellis Epperson Fockele Hamilton. R. Hanna Hudihurg Moore Rayhurn Rose McNeal Scott Collins lackney Maxwell, C. Stutz Maxwell. D Vintkier EUvvards Hamilton. F. May Wilson OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER John Carr Preudtnt Paul Ravburn - - V icc-Frts,cl„:t Frank Hamilton Stmtary Max Fockele Tnasimr SECOND SEMESTER John Carr Paul Ravhurn - Frank Hamilton - Max Fockele SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Founded March 9, 1856, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa. Kansas Beta chapter installed January 24, 1913. MEMBERSHIP Robert .Mexander, . r. E ■John Allen, EE 3 Elwyn Athey, C 1 Herbert Avery, VM 4 Fredrick Heeler, C 3 C. Price Berryman, GS 1 Major Bliss, CE 3 Tom Bushby, PE 2 Charles Clark, CE 1 Louis Cool, . g. 1 Homer Dreier, Ar. 2 Ralph Hanson, GS 1 G. Bertrand Harrop, C 2 Ernest Hilyard, GS 1 Leonard Izard, EE 2 Phil Jackson, Ag. 1 William Kaeser, C 3 Joseph Kepler, EE 3 Louis King, PE 1 Dwight Klinger. Ag. 1 Ralph Marshall, PE 2 Hewitt McCamish, CE 2 Ivan McDougal, EE 4 Independence. Mo. Howard Moreen, Ag. 2 Salina Seneca Atwood Morrison, C 3 Hutchinson Junction City J. Mark Martin, CE 2 Kansas City Wakefield Raymond Nelson, CE 3 Troy Jewell Citv George Peck, C 2 Topeka Fred on i a Forrest Petty, C 1 Clay Center Minneapolis Frank Prentup, Grad. Ft. Riley Belleville Harold Reed, Ar. 1 Marysville Almena Clav Reppert. IJ 3 Harris Glasco Nelson Reppert, IJ 3 Harris Kansas City Roy Sandels, PE 1 Belleville Concordia Bill Scales, C 3 Kansas City, Mo. Manhattan Frank Shideler, IJ 1 Girard Reece Maurice Stauffer, Ag. 1 Hymer Carthage, Mo. Paul Stephenson, Ag. 1 Clements Hutchinson Franklin Thackrey, IJ 4 Manhattan Alton, III. Floyd Seyb, Ag. 4 Pretty Prairie Ft. Scott Graydon Trusler, PE 1 Junction City Belleville Walter Tuchfarber, Ch. E 1 Olathe Ashland Leroy Wilkinson, Ar. 2 Alton, III. Kansas City, Mo. E. S. ' Wiseman, VM 2 Delphos Manhattan Robert Zebold, Ag. 4 Little Rock, .Ark. Atwood ames Towner, CE 2 Dwight MRS. EMMA PASMORE IbOp FAIRCHILD STREET Alexande Cool Kepler Petty Stephenso Athey Dreier Klinger Reed Thackrey Hanson McCamish Reppert, C, Towner McDougal Marshall Reppert, N Sandels Berrynian Bliss Hilyard Izard Moreen Morrisot Scales Seyb Tuchfarber Wilkinso Bushhy Clark Jackson Kaeser Nelson Peck Shideler Stauffer Zebold W OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Robert Zcbold Prtxulriit Clay Reppert V:ct-Pnsidcnt Raymond Nelson Sicrttary Robert Alexander ------ Tnasimr SECOND SEMESTER - Clay Reppert han MtOougal Raymond Nelson Robert Alexander SIGMA NU Founded January 1, 1896, ' irginia Military Institute. Beta Kappa chapter installed Mav 23, 1913. MEMBERSHIP A. K. Badcr, Ar. E 4 Herbert Beeman, . r. 2 Roy Best, HE 4 Emmei Breen, PE 4 Wm. Brown, GS 2 Lloyd Dal ton, C 4 Hal Doolittle, EE 2 Edward Dyck, GS 2 George Eicholtz, Ar. E 1 Leonard Garrison, GS 4 Fred Garrison, Ar. E 2 Neil Gibson, CE 4 Jack Going, ME 4 Carlyle Grage, Ag. 2 Harry Hasler, PE 4 George Ha)-nes, EE 1 Richard Herzig, MEd. 3 Clarence Higdon, ME 3 Junction Citv Hutchinson Wichita EIDorado Junction Citv Ottawa Kansas City, Mo. Halstead Abilene Manchester Parsons Ottawa Topeka Wichita EIDorado Abilene Salina Kansas City, Mo. Edward Johnson, EE 3 Warren Keller, EE 2 Benjamin Lantz, Ag. 4 George Lopp, V ' M 1 James Mayden, EE 2 James North, Ag. 3 Ralph Olin, C 2 Carl Paulson, CE 1 Howard Pettibon, C 4 Leland Propp, C 2 Walter Smith, C 3 Quinton Siebert, GS 1 John Stewart, CE 3 Sheppard Smyth, EE 3 Cecil Stoner, C 3 Byron Swain, IJ 4 Arthur Tindall, IC 3 Robert Wallerstedt, EE 2 Emporia Great Bend Salina Kansas Citv, Mo. Junction Citv Kansas City, Mo. EIDorado EIDorado Hutchinson Marion Cottonwood Falls Marion Abilene St. Joseph, Mo. Wichita McPherson Hutchinson Manhattan MRS F V, (1RRIS 1U!1 LE.W ENWORTH STREE I OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Harrv L. Hasler Prtsuhnt Dcn)amin Lantz Vue-PieuJeiir Howard Pettibon Stmtary Leonard Garrison Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER Harrv L. Hasler Benjamin Lantz Howard Pettibon - lames North SIGMA PHI EPSILON Founded November 1, 1901, Richmond College, Richmond, ' irginia. Kansas Beta chapter installed February 23, 1918. L. E. Abbott, PE 2 K. V. Bcniamin, C 1 K, U. Benjamin, EE 4 R. C. Besler, ME 4 D. W. Blaine, PE 3 W. A. Brewer, PE 1 E. C. Brookovcr, CE 3 D.J. Burterfield, CE 1 C. A. Bycrs, GS4 F. W. Castello, Ag. 4 D. J. Costa, GS 3 R. D. Compton, EE 3 L. R. Daniels, Ag. 4 W. E. Dickie, VM 3 M. L. DuMars, IJ 4 J. W. Frazier, CE 2 George Garrison, Ag. 2 R. M. Graham, PE 3 K. W. Harter, IJ 3 MEMB Phillipsburg ERSHIP H. W. Hinckley, MEd. 4 Barnard Dcerheld P. H. Hostetler, Ag. 3 Harper Svlvia Deertield J. M. Johnson, Ag. E 2 Manhattan J. R. Ketchersid, Ag. and VM 2 Hope ElDorado H. C. Kirk, GS 2 Scott City Manhattan V. M. Krainbill, AA 1 Bern Scott Citv F. B. Majors, GS 1 Elmo Cansas City, Mo. Ray Murray, IJ 1 Schenectady, N. Y. Manhattan R. F. McAtee, PE 2 Council Grove McCune Gene Peery, EE 1 Manhattan Hutchinson M. E. Phillips, CE 4 Wichita Manhattan E. S. Shonyo, IC 4 Bushton St. Francis W. Thornbrough, GS 1 Lakin Louisburg A. A. Thornbrough, Ag. 2 Lakin Agra E. J. Weir, EE 1 ' Stafford Manhattan M. H. Wertzberger, Ag. 3 Alma Goodland J. D. Woodruff, CE 4 Dodge Citv ElDorado S. H. Wyant, ME 2 Topeka Alma ElDorado W. W. Zeckser, Ag. 4 MRS. J, D. RITCHEY 221 NORTH DELAWARE STREET 4ii4 Benjamin, K. U. Benjamin. K. W. Johnson Phillips BrtKikover Daniels DuMars Garris Ketchersid Kirk Majo Shonyo rhornbrough, A. Ihornhrough, W. Wei Murray Zeckser nRST SEMESTER K. U. Benjamin K. W. Hartcr - E. S. Shonyo - F. W. Castello OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER President K.U. Benjamin Vice-Piesident K. W. Hartcr Secretary E. S. Shon ' 0 Treasurer F. W. Castello s TAU KAPPA EPSILON Founded January 10, 1899, Illinois Wesleyan College. Alpha Lambda chapter installed 1931- MEMBERSHIP W. Adair, PE 1 Los . ngelcs, Cal. Donald R. Johnston, C 4 Manhattan Merle V. Allen, GS 4 Manhattan Fred Kruger, Grad. Horton John S. Bidnick, ME 3 Kansas City Vclmar W. McGinnis, VM 4 Ord, Neb. Verle E. Bogle, CE 4 Pittsburg EveretJ. McNay, Ag. 4 Clay Center Lee Brewer, Ag. 1 Hartford Norris W. Nelson, . g. 4 McPherson Kenneth C. Burgcrt, EE 4 ElDorado Harold Nonamaker, Grad. Osborne Vaughn W. Combs, Ag. 4 Linn Francis J. Perrier, ME 4 OIpe Edgar A. Cooper, EE 3 Stafford Rowland R. Renwanz, CE 1 Enterprise Joseph A. Doubrava, CE 4 Lorraine Jonah Schreiner, GS 4 Tampa Louis B. Earle, EE 3 Washington Ephriam Schwab, g. E 3 Gridley William H. Hervev, VM 1 Robert R. Teagarden, Ag. 3 LaCygne Nebrask a City, Neb. Charles F. Turner, C 4 Hartford Kenneth Hougland, .Ag. 2 Olathe Charles W. Turner, EE 3 Saffordville George R. Irvine, Ag. E 4 Staffor d Harold Walker, .Ag. 2 Bucklin MRS, J.WIES .A. JACKSON ' 41 Ni ' RTM Si£ 1-:N Burgert Schwab Ccxjper Teagarden Doubrava Turner. C. F. FIRST SEMESTER Merle W. Allen Francis Perrier George R. Irvine Charles F. Turner OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER President ------ Robert R. Teagarden Vice-President - George R. Irvine Secretary ------ Edgar A. Cooper Treasurer Francis Perrier THETA XI Founded April 29, 1864, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Alpha Iota chapter installed November 7, 1931. Earl P. Anderson, A . 1 Buell W. Beadle, IC 2 Richard Bean, EE 2 Si Virgil E. Bradley, CE 4 Sain P. Cory, CE 4 Harold M. Denison, EE 4 Al H. Duncan, EE 2 L. O. Elliott, AE 3 J. H. Gumni, CE 3 Todd Heath, Ag. 1 Allen R. Heidebrecht, EE 3 LeRoy L. Hcinsohn, EE 2 Karl M. Hemker, EE 3 Louis J. Hunter, CE 2 M. C. Kastncr, VM 4 MEMBERSHIP aynesvillc. Mo. Donald C. Kelley, VM 2 Great Bend St. Marvs Walter Leemhuis, EE 2 Rome, N. Y. enectadv, N. Y. Edgar W. Millenbruck, VM 2 Herkimer Belle Plaine Edwin L. Millenbruck, VM 2 Herkimer Hutchinson Ben D. Pile, EE 3 Ottawa Topcka William C. Ransom, AE I Manhattan Andover Valley Center Manhattan Leoti Buhlcr Ravmond R. Roepkc, IC 4 Howard S, Spear, EE 3 John McP. Rutherford, Ch. Ernest R. Specht, CE 3 H2 Manhattan Lcoti Ft. Riley Emporia Newton Earl E. Stegman, ME 3 Manhattan Great Bend Art R. Thiele, VM 3 Bremen Topeka Emerson M. Thwing, EE 1 Craig, Mo. Manhattan Clifford J. Woodley, ME 4 Tecumsch MRS. ROSE CASSIDY lnl4 FAIRCHILD STREET Beadle Heidebrecht Millenbruck lieinsohn Ransom Bradley Cury Denison Hemker Hunter Kastner Roepke Rutherford Specht Kelley Thwing Leemhuis Wood lev OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Clifford Woodley- ------ Pnsidtttt Harold M. Denison Re,-, Secrctan Louis Hunter Cor. Secretary Buell W. Beadle Tn SECOND SEMESTER - Clifford Woodley - LeRoy Heinsohn Allen Heidchrctht Buell W. Beadle BEAUTIES OF KANSAS STATE 1. Lois Narraniore of Chi Omega. 2. Marie Antrim of Clovia. 3. Virginia Speer of Zeta Tau Alpha. 4. Lois Rosencrans, Alpha Delta Pi. 5. Donalda Keeney of Chi Omega. 6. Nancy Jane Campbell, Chi Omega. 7. Doris Dalton, Delta Delta Delta. 8. Jeanette Moser, Delta Delta Delta. 9. Margaret M. Reddy, Chi Omega. 10- Jane Whyte, Kappa Kappa Gamma. 11. Malena Jane Berglund, Pi Beta Phi. 12. Merreduh Manion, Delta Delta Delt 13. Helen Smerchek, Beta Phi Alpha. SENIOR WOMEN ' S PANHELLENIC OFFICERS Eleanor Wright --- . Vrfudint Feme Taiinahill --- Vice-?reudtnt Mae Gordon Secntary MEMBERSHIP Alpha Delta Pi Kappa Delta Feme Tannahill Dorothy Blackman Alpha Xi Delta Kappa Kappa Gamma Ivalee Hedge Dorothy Cortelyou Beta Phi Alpha Phi Omega Pi Helen Tedman Mae Gordon Chi Omega Pi Beta Phi Merle Ross Ernestine Mcrritt Delta Delta Delta Zeta Tau Alpha Helen Morgan Hazle Bland Blackman Bland Cortelyou Cordon Hedge Merritt Ross Tannahill Tedman Wright FRESHMAN WOMEN ' S PANHELLENIC OFFICERS Betty Stanley - - Pnsidmt Feme Vesecky . Vui-Pnudent Mary Jane Pae - - - Secttary Louise Rust --------.-_._. Treasurer MEMBERSHIP Alpha Delta Pi Kappa Delta Lucille Johntz Elsie Gottschalk Jane Svvenson Leona Schultz Alpha Xi Delta Kappa Kappa Gamma Feme Vesecky Margaret Carr Mary Elizabeth Wilkes Louise Rust Beta Phi Alpha Phi Omega Pi Blanche Pierce Jewel Stockdale Chi Omega Pi Beta Phi Cybil Crocker Jean Sullivan Mary J. Pae Vera Trusier Delta Delta Delta Zeta Tau Alpha Harriet Shrack Clarissa Arnold Betty Stanley Elizabeth Miller Carr Pierce SulUvan Crocker Rust Trusier Johntz Schultz Vesecky k v ALPHA DELTA PI Founded May 15, 1851, Wesleyan Female College, Macon, Georgia. Alpha Eta chapter installed October 30, 1915. MEMBERSHIP Ethel Irene Call, HE 3 Mound Vallev Arlene Marshall, HE 2 Herington Mary Lou Clark, PE 2 Burr Oak Roberta Odie, HE 2 Manhattan Marjorie Conner, C 1 Luray Margaret Patterson, HE 4 Kansas Citv, Mo. Olga Cook, HE 2 Fort .Amador, Peggy Parker, HE 1 Hill Citv ' anama Canal Zone Doris Paulson, PE 4 ElDorado hernia Daniclson, IJ 1 Manhattan Virginia Peterson, GS 4 Manhattan LoisDarhv, MEd, 1 Morrow ville Lois Rosencrans, PE 2 Manhattan Miriam Davis, HE 1 Holton Myra Roth, HE 2 Ness City Betty Deniing, GS 3 Manhattan Esther Row, GS 4 Earned Margaret Elder, HE 4 Hutchinson Margaret Seaton, IJ 2 Fred on i a Margaret Easterday, IJ 3 Greeley, Colo. Lorena Schlemmer, HE 4 Kansas Citv, Mo. Ethel Fairbanks, C 2 Manhattan Rose Skradski, HE 2 Kansas City Gwendolyn Fisher, HE 2 Marion Harriet Swan, HE 4 Washington Sarah Anna Grimes, HE 1 Manhattan Jane Swenson, PE 3 Phoenix, Anz. Fern Henry, HE 1 Salina FerneTannahill, HE 2 Manhattan Imogene Hubhard, HE 1 Bartlesville, Okla. Frances Tannahill, HE 1 Manhattan Amy Jasperson, IJ 3 Colbv Marianna Thompson, GS 3 McPherson Lucilejohntz, PE 1 Amelia Kroft, HE 3 Abilene Wilson Oda Mae Tracy, C 1 Manhattan Geraldine Lancaster, HE 3 Parsons Ellen Warren, IJ 4 Dalhart, Texas Thelma Large, PE 4 Protection Vona Wandling, HE 1 Sharon Springs Florence McKinney, HE 3 Bartlesville, Okla. Camilla Wallace, GS 3 Ness City Katheryn McKinney, PE 3 Bartlesville, Okla. Alice White, C 2 Jewell Margaret Madaus, HE 3 Hutchinson Bertha White, C 2 Jewell MRS. RANSOM STEPHENS Fairbanks Large Rosencrans, L. Tannahill, Franct Maclaus Roth Thompson Daniclson Hcnrv Marshall Row Tracy Darhy Hubbard Parker Schlemmer Wallace Jasperson Patterson Seaton Wandling Johnt: Paulson Skra dski Warren Easterdas ' Kroft Peterson R( sencrans, i Tannah.ll. Fe White. B. FIRST SEMESTER Doris Paulson Alice White - Arlenc Marshall Ellen Warren OFFICERS Pre,! Jill t - V!ce-Presidtlir - Secritary Tniiiunr SECOND SEMESTER Doris Paulson - Alice White Arlenc Marshall - Ellen Warren ALPHA XI DELTA Founded 1893, Lombard College, Galesburg, Illinois. Alpha Kappa chapter installed June 1, 1922. Alice Barrier, GS 2 Pauline Crawford, HE 3 Helen Davis, HE 4 Francis Hampshire, HE 4 Ivalee Hedge, HE 4 Marie Holt, GS 2 Alice Kimball, GS 3 Louise Krehbiel, HE 3 Bernice Lathrop, IJ 2 Mary McMullcn, HE 2 Merle Mark, HE 4 Elizabeth Poole, GS 4 MEMBERSHIP Topeka Wilma Reinhardt, HE 4 Bison Luray Erma Schmedemann, GS 3 Manhattan Topeka Hollis Sexson. HE 3 Goodland Manhattan Genevieve Shellhaas, GS 4 Junction City Manhattan Esther Smiley, HE 4 Manhattan Manhattan Ruth Stiles, IJ 4 Kansas City Manhattan Newton Feme Vesecky, IJ 2 Kansas City Smith Center Betty Wagstaff, PE 4 Topeka Oberl.n Mary Elizabeth Wilkes, HE 2 Leavenworth Abilene Eleanor Wilkinson, HE 2 Hi mboldt. Neb Kansas City, Mo. Winifred Wolf, IJ 2 Ottawa MRS. E. S. CHAMBERS 303 NORTH SIXTEENTH STREET ' fl l .i P ffl -n ] f 1 HIL . . JIHbi Barrier (-ruu l.irJ Davis Hedge Kimball Krehhit Lathrop McKibhcn McMuilen Mark Munal Poole Reinhardt Sexson Smil ev Sciies Thompson Vesecky Wagstaff Wilkes Wilkinson Wolf FIRST SEMESTEI Ruth Stilcs Ivalce Hedge Helen Davis Alice Barrier OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER Pr,!tdtnt Mollis Sexson V ici-Preudmt Erma Schinedcniann Stcrrtiiry Alice Kimball Trt tnircr Winifred Wolf BETA PHI ALPHA Founded April 9, 1909, University of California, Berkeley, Cal Nu chapter installed October 23, 1926. MEMBEF ISHIP Mildred Aspclin, GS 4 D wig In Edna Pieplow Chapman HE 3 Manhattan Marcine Camphell, PE 4 Hollis Blanche Amv Pierce, HE 1 Burden Ethel Eherhart, Ar. 4 Topeka Mila Pishnev, HE 4 Clchurne Francis Herzig, HE 4 Smolan Julia Rader, GS 2 Manhattan Alnnra Jacobson, HE Grad. Manhattan Aileen Rundle, HE 4 Clav Center Mildred Masden, MEd. 4 Lenora Giadvs Mellinger, HE 3 Milford Lois Scripter, HE 3 Herington Opal Morris, GS 2 Rilev Helen Smerchek, HE 4 Garnett Gladys Paulsen, MEd. 2 Onaga Helen Tedman, HE 4 Mount Hope MRS. EDITH DODD 144b LARAMIE STREET Aspelin Campbell Eberhart Herzig Jacobson Masdera Mellinger Morris Pierce Pishney Rader Rundle Scripter Smerchek Ted man OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Lois Scripter President Mila Pishncy Helen Tedman Vtce-Piesideiit Helen Tetlman Frances Herzig Stmnn-y Mildred Aspelin MarcincCamphcll- Tn.isurer - - - - - - Marcine Campbell CHI OMEGA Founded April 5, 1895, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas. Kappa Alpha chapter installed September, 1915- MEMBERSHIP Maxine Blanlcenship, HE 4 Charlotte Buchmann, IJ 2 Marjorie Call, IJ 2 Nancy Jane Campbell, HE 1 Marian Chiids, Spec. 3 Zclma Conn, HE 3 Cibyl Crocker, IJ 1 Marian Crocker, IJ 4 Jean Dexter, HE 2 Mary Dexter, HE 3 Frances Doornhos, GS 3 Roberta Downie, GS 4 Louise Fenner, C 2 Frances Fockele, MEd. 4 Margaret Gar J, GS 4 Luella Graham, GS 4 Gcraldine Grass, C 4 Mayrie Griffith, IJ 3 Helen Hanson, HE 3 Virginia Haggart, IJ 3 Frances Jacks, IJ 2 Downs Clay Center Manhattan Lakin Hoisington Kirbyville, Texas Manhattan Manhattan Columbus, Ga. Columbus, Ga. EIDorado Garden City Jewell City LeRoy Kansas City, Mo. Topeka LaCrosse Topeka Clay Center Topeka Harper Genevie Johnson, C 2 Topeka Florence Jones, HE 4 EIDorado Jane Kahl, IJ 2 Topeka Donalda Keeney, IJ 1 Lucas Florence Lovejoy, HE 2 Almena Lois Narramore, HE 2 Elmdale Evelyn Osborne, HE 3 Lawton, Okla. Mary Jane Pae, GS 1 Concordia Margaret Mary Reddy, IJ 3 Baxter Springs Adelaine Rcid, HE 4 lola Merle Ross, GS 4 Dover Denelda Shafer, IJ 3 Manhattan Roberta Shannon, GS 2 Geneseo Jane Speed, HE 3 Parsons Mary Ellen Springer, HE 2 Manhattan Dorothy Taylor, HE 1 Downs Esther Walters, HE 3 Manhattan Edna Pearl Willis, HE 3 Leoti Florence Wiltsc, GS 4 River Forest, III. Eleanor Wright, I) 4 Concordia MRS. J J. BARRY 1801 LARAMIE bIKIhl lankenship Buchmann (all rnmphell Chikh Conn c rocker, ( I 1 I Dexter, J. Dexter, M. Doom bos Downic Fenner Fockele Card Gralidii Grass Griffith Haggart Hanson Jacks Johnson Jones Kahl Keeney Lnvejoy Narramorc Osborne Pae Reddy Reid Ross Shafer Shannon Speed Taylor Walters Willis Wiltsc Wnght FIRST SEMESTER AJclaiiic Rcid Mary Dexter - Esther Walters Mayrie Griffith Vm-Prtudcnt Scactan Trcjuirn SECOND SEMESTER - livclvn Osborne Charlotte BiKliinaiin - - Jean Dexter - Esther Walters CLOVIA Founded at Kansas State College, September 7, 1931- MEMBERSHIP Man- Elizabeth Allman HE 3 Manhattan Mildred Gibhs, HE 1 Kansas Citv Marie Antrim, HE 4 Spivev Gertrude Greenwood, HE 1 Kansas City Ethel Bellis. HE 2 Ottawa Esther E.Johnson, HE 2 Ottawa Frances Bcrggren. HE 1 Morganville Mary Jordan, HE 3 Beloit Ellen Blair, HE 4 Williamsburg Bessie Meador, GS 2 Olathe Marie Blvthe, GS 1 White Citv Myra Ogg, HE 1 Ottawa Opal Bowers, HE 3 Payette, Idaho Christine Overley, HE 1 Belle Plaine Grace Burson, HE 1 Oakley Ethel Rosev. MEd. 2 Junction Citv Wilma Cook, PE 2 Earned Ruby Corr, HE 1 Clearwater Marian Stahlman, GS 3 Potwin Jessie Dean, IJ 2 Ottawa Blanche Tomson, HE 4 Dover Leonice Fisher, HE 3 Fort Scott Virginia Wagner, HE 1 Richmond Beulah Frey, HE 4 Elmdale Ruby Wilson, HE 2 Council Grove MRS. R i ' -I Burson Johnson Antrim Cook Jordan Dean Rosey Fisher Tomson Wagn Wilson OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Mary Jordan -------- President Jessie Dean -------- Vice-President Ruh ' Wilson Secretary Ellen Blair - Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER - Jessie Dean - Wilma Cook Gertrude Greenwood Grace Burson DELTA DELTA DELTA Founded November, 1888, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts. Theta Iota chapter installed June 5, 1915. Dorothea Bacon, GS 3 Helen Bradley, HE 4 Doris Dalton, GS 1 Josephine Donnelly, GS 2 Ella Fours, GS 2 Mary Elizabeth Flcenor, HE 1 Alberta Gurtler, HE 4 Margaret Green, HE 1 Dororha Hadsell, GS 4 Lcla Hahn, GS 4 Gcraldine Hammond, GS 1 Betty Heffelfinger, GS 4 Ruth Hopkins, GS 3 Patricia Irwin, GS 2 Frances Jack, GS 4 Roberta Jack, HE 4 Rowena Johnson, GS 4 Margaret Joyce, HE 1 Artha Lee Knisely, GS 1 Elizabeth Lamprecht, HE 2 MEMBERSHIP .Atchison Grace Light, GS 3 Liberal Sedan Leora Light, GS 3 Liberal St. George Madge Mahoncy, GS 3 Atchison Goodland Merrideth Manion, GS 2 Goodland McPherson Ermajean Miller, GS 3 Manhattan Manhattan Helen Morgan, GS 3 Newton Topeka Jeanette Moser, GS 3 Blue Rapids Pratt Mildred Mowery, HE 3 Salina Manhattan Eltie Mae Musgrove, HE 1 Ft. Rilev Glen Elder Margaret Myers, GS 2 Wichita St. John Eleanor Otto, GS 1 Manhattan Newton Ellen Payne, GS 1 Manhattan Garden City Elinor Pryor, GS 3 Wichita Manhattan Maxine Roper, HE 3 Manhattan Russell Harriet Shrack, GS 2 Pratt Russell Elizabeth Smith, HE 2 Kansas City Ft. Scott Betty Stanley, GS 3 Wichita Oswego Roberta Strowig, HE 1 Paxico Liberal Mary Whitclaw, GS 3 Kingman Manhattan Mabel Louise Whitford, GS 4 Hutchinson MRS. HENRY PEHLING 1834 L.ARAMIE STREET Bacon Bradley Dalton Donnelly FIccnor Fouts Green Gunler Hadsell Hahn Hammond Heffelfinger Hopkins Jack, F. Jack, R. Johnson Joyce Kniscly Lamprecht Light, G. Light, L Mahoney Man ion Miller Morgan Moser Mowerv Musgrove Myers Otto Payne Pryor Ratllff Shrack Stanley Whitelaw Whitford OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Mabel Louise Whithxd ----- PrcuJcin ----- Mahel Louise Whitford Dorotlia Hadsell Vm-Prcuilciit ------- noiotha Hadsell Erma jean Miller Simr.iry Ernia Jean Miller Louise RatlilT Treajimr Louise Ratliff KAPPA DELTA Founded October, 1897, ' irginia State Normal, Farmville, ' irginia. Sigma Gamma chapter installed December 4, 1920. Dorothy Blackman, GS 3 Mabel Brasche, HE 3 Eunice Brown, GS 2 Jeanne Burt, Spec. Elizabeth Jo Gates, IJ 1 Mildred Forrester, PE 3 Elsie Gottschalk, PE 1 Marie Hennev, IJ 4 Leora Lang, C 3 Dorothy Leshoslcy, HE 1 Geneva Marble, HE 3 MEMBERSHIP Manhattan Clara Jean Martin, ME Alma Mary Lucille McConatl Sylvia Wilda McNally, IJ 2 Manhattan Maxine Osborne, HE 2 Salina Edith Ramey, HE 4 Wamego Marjorie Ramey, HE 4 Wichita Mildred Sands, GS 2 Hutchinson Louise Scheu, PE 4 Cuba Leona Schultz, Spec. Cuba Lois Stingley, PE 2 Trov Winifred Young, GS 2 Roodhouse, III. Olathe Manhattan Manhattan Manhattan Wichita Manhattan Manhattan Manhattan Wakefield MRS. FRED BOGGESS 171b FAIRCHILD STREET Blackman Brasche Burt Forrester Henney , Lang Lcshosky Martin McNally Marble Scheu Schultz Slinglcy Young FIRST SEMESTER Dorothy Blackman Marie Hcnncy Jeanne Burt - Leura Lan - Pnudeiit Vicc-Pniidait - Sccnh iy Tnasunr - SECOND SEMESTER Dorothy Blackfiian - - - MildrcJ Sands - - - L,„sStn,Klcv - Marv Lucille McConathv KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Founded October, 1870, Monmouth College, Monmouth, Illinois. Gamma Alpha chapter installed September 23, 1916. MEMBERSHIP Frances Bell, HE 3 Mary Emily Berryman, HE Kathryn Black, PE 1 Jeanne Bryan, IJ 2 Margaret Carr, HE 3 Fern Collins, GS 1 Dorothy Cortelyou, IJ 2 Helen Louise Davis, GS 2 Virginia Dole, HE 1 Helen Ehrlich, HE 2 EInora Gilson, GS 1 Harriet Gilson, GS 4 Jane Harmon, GS 1 Nev. lone Hill, C 1 Mary Horn, HE 1 Mary Houser, IJ 4 Lucienne Hudson, IJ 1 Elenor Kubin, IJ 2 Margaret Kelley, HE 4 Barbara Lautz, HE 3 Dorothy Linge, HE 4 Kan Marysville Fredonia Council Grove Delia City, Mo. Washington Manhattan Manhattan Salina Marion Manhattan Manhattan Brunswick, N. J. Harper Hoi ton Wooster, Ohio Fredonia McPhcrson Winfield . marillo, Tex. Topcka Lorraine McMullen, Spec. Vera Martin, HE 4 Marjorie Morrow, HE 4 Floye Poague, C 2 Helen Pickrell, HE 3 Harrel Porter, HE 4 Mary Ransopher, IJ 3 Katherine Reid, GS 4 Frances Rosser, HE 4 Louise Rust, GS 1 Rosemary Schmidt, MEd. 1 Gladys Skinner, C 3 Martha Jean Singleton, HE Jane Stone, IJ 1 Edna Van Tuyl, IJ 3 Grace Umberger, MEd. 2 Marie Vail, GS 3 Marion Wait, HE 2 Wilma Rae Womer, PE 1 Jane Whyte, GS 2 Hutchinson Hastings, Neb. Parsons Havensville Minneapolis Parsons Clyde Manhattan Pratt Manhattan Junction City Topeka 1 Fredonia Manhattan Manhattan Manhattan Marysville Superior, Neb. Topeka Kansas City, Mo. MRS. J. P. RAMSEYER ,T 517 N DELAWARE Linge Martin Pickrell Rust Schmidt Van Tuyl Wait Whyle FIRST SEMESTER Franctrs Bell - Dororh) Linge Mary Ransophci KatherinL- Rcid PnuJent Cor. Secreti ry Kec. Secretary Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER Barbara Latitz Dorothy Linge - Mary Ransopher -jcannt; Bryan PHI OMEGA PI Founded March 3, 1910, University of Nebraska. Omicron chapter installed May 11, 1923. Charlotte Brooks, HE 1 Marcia Conrad. GS 3 Blanche Ciirrv, HE 4 ' elma French, IJ 2 Waneta Fry. HE 1 Mae Gordon, HE 3 Althea Keller, HE 2 Ruth Mears, HE 2 MEMBERSHIP Brewster Cora Oliphant, PE 3 Offerle Manhattan Helen Reed, GS 3 Circleville Winchester Helen Shedd, HE 2 Tr.hunc Concordia Jewel Stockdale, HE 2 Kansas City Brewster DeSoto Laura Ward, HE 3 St- Joseph, Mo. Enterprise Cleo Wilson, HE 1 Manhattan Simpson Mane Wilson, HE 2 Manhattan MRS. FRED GORCX3N I4n,s L, R, MIE STREET I . JK Conrad Reed French Stockdale Uhphant Wilson. M. OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Mae Gordon -------- Presuitnt Cora Oliphant - Vm-Pnudmt Marcia Conrad ------- StcrttM-y Helen Reed -------- Trejium- SECOND SEMESTER Cora Oliphant Jewel Stockdale Marcia Conrad - Helen Reed PI BETA PHI Founded April, 1867, Monmouth College, Monmouth, Illinois. Kansas Beta chapter installed April 28, 1915. MEMBERSHIP Voma Alcott, HE 1 Rosalind Almen, HE 3 Lucille Allman, IJ 1 Juliana Amos, MEd. 4 Charlcne Baker, IJ 2 Mildred Beard, MEd. 4 Malena Jane Bcrglund, C 1 Mary Blackman, IJ 1 Mary Brookshier, HE 4 Miriam Clark, GS 4 Gertrude Cowdery, GS 4 Wilma Cowdery, GS 2 Jane Daughters, HE 1 Martha Daughters, IJ 1 Eugenia Ebling, IJ 4 Mary Louise Hampshire, HE Betty Harold, GS 1 Eleanor Hart, C 1 Monita Harris, HE 3 Telia Hinshaw, GS 1 Glenda Mae Hodge, GS 1 Mary Hoi ton, HE 4 Coihv McPherson Manhattan Manhattan Grcenshurg McPherson Lindsborg Manhattan Osborne lola Lyons L ons Manhattan Manhattan Lindsborg 2 Manhattan Sabetha Overbrook Parsons Bennington Cherokee, Okla. Manhattan Margaret Hughes, C 2 Mary Kendall, IJ 1 Jaconette Lawrence, IJ 2 Marjorie LaShelle, C 4 Marjorie Lemon, MEd. 4 Virginia Lovett, MEd. 4 Verna McAdam, GS 4 Ambrosia McCIaren, PE 1 Vance McClymonds, HE 1 Kathleen Mallon, HE 1 Dorothv Maltbv, PE 4 Ernestine Meriitt, HE 3 Weldene Middiekauff, PE 1 Betty Miller, HE 1 Bernice Mosser, C 3 Janet Miirdock, IJ 1 Ruth Obenland, GS 3 Ruth Strickland, GS 4 Jean Sullivan, IJ 1 Marian Todd, HE 2 Vera Trusler, MEd. 1 Ann Washington, GS 4 Manhattan Great Bend Council Grove Manhattan Wakefield Great Bend Parsons Galena Walton Anthony Canton Haven Beatrice, Neb. Hays Earned Wichita Manhattan Manhattan Manhattan Leavenw ' orth Junction City Manhattan MRS. GF.RTRLIDE TORREY 505 DENISON STREET Alcott Brookshit Lemon Mosser Ailman Almen Amos Baker Beard Clark Cowdery, G. Cowdery. W. Daughters, J. Daughters. M Ebhng Hart Hinshaw Hodge Hulton Hughes Kendall McAdam McClaren McClymonds Mallon Maltby Merritt MurJock Obenland Strickland Sullivan Todd BerglunJ tlampshire LaShelle Middlekauff Trusler Biackmar Harold Miller Washiiigto OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Bernice Mosser Pinidciit Ruth Strickland Vne-Presieleiit Gertrude Cowdery ieaetary Dorothy Maltby Trtatimr SECOND SEMESTER Dorothy Maltby Ruth Obenland -Mary Holton - Marion Todd • ' V ZETA TAU ALPHA Founded October 25, 1898, ' irginia State Normal, FarmviUe, Virginia. Beta Upsilon chapter installed May 7, 1931- MEMBERSHIP Clarissa Arnold, HE 2 Hazlc Bland, HE 4 Margaret Bicrnian, HE 4 Mary Elizabeth Cooper, IJ 1 Evelvn Diehlman, HE I Panice Finch, IJ 1 Muriel Fulton, GS 3 Marian Knostman, IJ 2 Margaret Lynch, HE 4 lone Clothier McNay, IJ 3 Frankfort Garden City Kensington Manhattan Findlay, Ohio Oketo Wichita Oak Park, III. Hutchinson Manhattan Florence Melchert, HE 4 Jo Elizabeth Miller, HE 1 Ruth Parcels, HE 3 Harriet Reed, GS 3 Opal Schlickau, PE 1 ' irginia Speer, IJ 3 Elizabeth Steele, HE 4 Gladys Tonn, GS 4 Elizabeth Walbert, HE 2 Elouisc White, C 2 Ottawa Manhattan Hiawatha Hoi ton Haven Manhattan Manhattan Haven Columbus Dalhart, Te, as MRS. A. W. EVANS Ib42 FAIRCHILD OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Elizabeth Steele ------- President Margaret Lynch ------- Vice-Pnudeiit Hazle Bland - - - Semrary Margaret Bierman ----.. Treaiiirer SECOND SEMESTER Elouise White Evelvn Diehlman - Harriet Reed Elizabeth Miller ENCHILADAS Panhellcnic dancing organization to promote inter-sorority good will. Founded at Kansas State College in 1917. Baker Fockeie Maltby Scripter Ivalec Hedge Mildred Masden Pre it dent Sccretary-Treij surer Alpha Delta Pi Mary Lou Clark Margaret Virginia Eldc Doris Paulson Margaret Seaton Lorena Sclileramer Ellen Warren Alice White Alpha Xi Delta Helen Davis Ivalee Hedge Alice Kimball Wilnia Reinhardt Erma Schmcdemann Genevieve Shellhaas Feme Vesecky Beta Phi Alpha Ethel Ebcrhart Frances Larson Herzig Mildred Masden Blanche Pierce Mila Pishney Aileen Rundle Lois Scripter Helen Snierchek Blackn MEMBERSHIP Chi Omega Maxine Blankenship Frances Fockeie Evelyn Osborne Adelaine Reid Florence Wiltse Eleanor Wright Delta Delta Delta Dorotha Hadsell Betty Heffelhnger Frances Jack Roberta Jack Rowcna Johnson Maxine Roper Kappa Delta Jeanne Burt Dorothy Blackman Leora Lang Wilda McNally Edith Ramey Louise Scheu Zeta Tau Alpha Margaret Bierman Hazle Bland Muriel Fulton Margaret Lynch Elizabeth Steele Elouise White Kappa Kappa Gamma Jeanne Brvan Elenor Kubin Dorothy Linge Helen Pickrell Gladys Skinner Marian Wait Phi Omega Pi Mae Gordon Cora Oliphant Helen Reed Laura Ward Marie Wilson Pi Beta Phi Wilma Covvdery Mary Hoi ton Marjorie Lemon Dorothy Maltby Bernice Mosser Delta Zeta Zora Knox Hedge Mark Skinner Holtc. Masden Vesecky Jack. F. Bryc Kimball Oliphant Warren Kno Paulsc Whvle. Burt Kubin Pishney White. A. Da Wright Fberharc Linge Scheu Elder McNally Schle W.ltf VAN ZILE HALL X TARY PIERCE ' AN ZILE was most influential in 1926 in securing the construction of a girls ' dormi- tory on the northeast campus. MRS. NINA M. RHOADES OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Martha Rodda Prsudsnt Rita Brown Vtce-President Amelia Manker Secretary Esther Mundell Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER Irene Todd - Pauline Vail Charlotte Leuenberger Marv Hanlev BEAUTIES OF KANSAS STATE 1. Myra Roth, Alpha Delta Pi. 2. Betty Miller, Pi Beta Phi. 3. Mary Brookshier, Pi Beta Phi. 4. Oda Mae Tracy, Alpha Delta Pi. 5. Erma Jean Miller, Delta Delta Delta. 6. Elsie Gottschalk, Kappa Delta. 7. Jane Stone, Kappa Kappa Ganinia. 8. Geraldine Grass, Chi Omega. 9. Lois Darby, Alpha Delta Pi. 10. Jane Speed, Pi Beta Phi. 11. Telia Hinshaw, Pi Beta Phi. 12. Pauline Vail, Van Zile Hall. 13- Jane Harmon, Kappa Kappa Gamma. J INTERSOCIETY COUNCIL FIRST SEMESTER Aileen Rundle Reba Miller - Raymond Hughes Velma Capper M. V. DeGeer - OFFICERS President Vks-Preudent Stcretary Treasurer Marshal SECOND SEMESTER -Ravmond Hughes John Latta - Rav Stremel ■- Helen Reed Paul autravers MEMBERSHIP Athenian Do uglas BIy Ray Stremel Browning Ermine Nixon Elsie Fern Selby Franklin Marie Davis Harold Rowland Hamilton Raymond Hughes John Latta Ionian Helen Reed Mary Alice Schnacke Webster Orville Denton Paul Vautravers SPONSOR Miss Helen Elcock Coopei BROWNING LITERARY SOCIETY FIRST SEMESTER Carolyn Mather Velma Capper Helen Boler - Hester Perr - Treasurer OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER President Esther I. Wiedower Vice Presides Elizabeth Walbert Secretary Edna Swank Ermine Nixon FRANKLIN LITERARY SOCIETY OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER John Hamon - - - President John Ferguson Vice-President Neal Morehouse B.ec. Secretary Marie Davis - - - Qir. Secretary Althea Siddens ------- Treauirer Mrirehnuse H Rmvland B. Cook Edwards Strcetc Stnrer Landrum I ' liung SECOND SEMESTER - Neal Morehouse Pauline Smith Marie Davis Althea Siddens ■Florence Schwendrner W, Rowland Smith )ohns( Siddens Pa IRC HAMILTON LITERARY SOCIETY FIRST SEMESTER Albert Green - Penn Thompson John Latta - Ralph Conrad John Roberts - lames Wells - OFFICERS Preildeut ----- Vice-President - - - - - Treasurer - - - - - Cor. Secretary - - - - - Kec. Secretary Norman Booth Marshal Albert Green SECOND SEMESTER W. R. Roberts Raymond Hughes Walter Babbit - Alvin Plogcr IONIAN LITERARY SOCIETY FIRST SEMESTER Leonice Fisher Helen Smerchek Jessie Dean - Evelyn Ezell - OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER President Ruth Jorgenson Vice-President Marcia Conrad Secretary Evelyn Ezell Treasurer Geneva Johnson Johns, Jorgenson Reed Peck DYNAMIS T HE Socetv of Dynamis was founded March 4, 1930, that all students havtng high scholarship standing and showing superior qualities of leadership and initiative might have association to further develop these traits. OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER ,,...„ SECOND SEMESTER Virginia Peterson- ---... p,,w.«, ---... . Virginia Peterson Robert Roberts V,a-Pres.de,n Robert Roberts Marv Hoi ton ' !errrtarv - xi ti i - - „ iecrerary [ Holton Dorothy Reeier Tirarj i-rr - r ' n ' 6 iieasuier ----._ George Huyett MEMBERSHIP Wilma D. Brewer Wilma Buckwcll Ralph Conrad Gertrude Cowderv Bradbury Coale Romayne Cribbett Kenneth Davis William Davis Avis Downey Ethel Eherhart Vorras Elliot Mayrie Griffith J. Willis Jordan Harold Heckendorn Mary Holton Raymond Hughes George Huyett Amelia Kroft Maurine Lewis Neal Morehouse Carl Martinez Ruth Obcnland Virginia Peterson Elizabeth Poole Marjorie Pyle Harriet Reed Dorothv Regier Raymond Roepke Robert Roberts Mabel Russell Roberta Shannon Hildred Schweiter Ruth Strickland gel ma Turner Ralph Van Camp Margaret Ahlborn R. W. Babcock E. J. Benne HONORARY MEMBERS W. E. Grimes Randall Hill E. L. Holton Leo E. Hudiburg E. R. Lyons J. C. Peterson C. V. Williams IN APPRECIATION A NY publication depends on the cooperation of a large number of people, some of whom are intimate friends, and some of whom never see one another. The 1933 Roval Purple is parncularh ' indebted to fraternities and sororities at Kansas State, all of which gave unexpected support both in editorial and in financial work. Some of the people are paid for their work, while the help of others means a personal sacrifice, and deserves especial thanks and recognition. We wish, therefi)re, to give particular thanks to Mr. Kingslev Given of the department of public speaking for his repeated sacrifice of time and, we believe, monev, to help us obtain pictures which we could not otherwise have afforded for this yearbook. About half of the pictures in the ' iew sections are from his negatives. Some of them bear credit lines. A large number of pictures in the feature sections were taken by him, as well. We owe thanks, as well, to Mr. James Machir, who permitted us to use three of his negatives with- out charge for division pages in the yearbook, and to Mr. John Helm of the Department of Architecture who assisted Mr. Given in determining the correct composition for some pictures. Mr. H. W. Davis of the department of English and Mr. E. T. Keith of the department of journalism and printing have given their time and ad ice to assist the staff. We are indebted, as well, to the Burger-Baird engraving compan ' and especiallv to Mr. C. J. Medlin of that companv; to Arthur O. Browne, photo- grapher, and his assistants, and to the Joseph D. Havens Printing Company. Mr. FredSeaton of theSeaton Publishing Company deserves thanks for his time and trouble in assisting us. And we owe thanks to Messrs. Blake and Ralph Wareham. Mr. Jim Chapman, Editor of the 1932 Royal Purple, sacrificed considerable time and effort in giving us information and help. A number of other students, facultv members, and emplovees of the companies mentioned above deserve thanks, and no doubt we have failed to mention others who have done some outstanding service for us. To all of vou we wish, then, to say a sincere thank vou. Mr. Hugh Durham of the Division of Agriculture gave us particular cooperation in getting and pre- paring copy from his division. Steve ' esecky, Alaiias er Franklin Thackrey, Ed tor Ethel Eberhart, Sec ' y-Treaj. ALPHA ZETA FRATERNITY r TPPER classmen m the Division of Agriculture whose grades place them in the upper two-fifths of their class, and whose character and leadership qualities are outstanding, are elegible for election to Alpha Zeta. OFFICERS Glenn S. Fox President J. I. Miller Vice-President H. W. Clutter Secretary F. E. Davidson Treasurer Edwin Abmeyer Vernon E. Burnet Boyd R. Caihcart Harry W. Coberly Herbert W. Clutter Earl C. Coulter Floyd E- Davidson Orvillc F. Denton Andrew B. Erhart Andrew C. Elson MEMBERSHIP Charles E. Fisher Glenn S. Fox Paul W. Griffith Louis B. Hanson Pius H. Hostetler Wayne W. Jacobs H. L. Kugler W. M. Lewis John R. Latta John I. Miller C. Dean McNeal Nevelyn R. Nelson Wilfred H. Pine F. G. Parsons E. E. Sundgren Arthur C. Thomson A. A. Thornbrough Stephen Vesecky Abmeyer Burnet Erharr Fisher McNeal Miiler Clutter Coberley Elson Hostetler Jacobs Kugler Lewis Nelsiin Pine Thomson Thornbrough Veseckv La1L4. COLLEGIATE 4-H CLUB P STABLISHED December 16, 1927 to provide a continued interest for 4-H Club workers attending this college. FIRST SEMESTER Gaylord Munson - Florence Melchert Mary Jordan - President - Vice-Presidtnr Secretary- Treasure) SECOND SEMESTER Herbert Clutter - Mary Jordan Martha Lou Perkins MEMBERSHIP Marie Antrim W. W. Babbitt Dorothy Bacon Louis Bacon Ethel Bellis Frances Berggren Marcus Bergsten Lucille Bilderback Ellen Blair Arthur Blythe Marje Blythe Helen Boler Opal Bowers Elizabeth Breeden Vernon Burnett Frank Burson Grace Burson Wilnia Byers Gordon Carter Willard Chal lender W. H. Chilson George Clark Herbert Clutter F. M. Colmer Carl Conger Wilma Cook Ruby Corr David Crippen lulia Ellen Crow Jessie Dean Loren Elliott Sam Elliott Dudlev Flint Belle Forney Beulah Frey Boys Finney Leonice Fisher Elsie Fulks Leslie Fundis Marjorie Furham Mildred Gibbs Margaret Glass Gertrude Greenwood Helen Hanson Lucille Herndon Wayne Herring Ernest Hilyard Pius Hostettler Mary Frances Hurley Wayne Jacobs Carl Johnson Esther Johnson Mary Jordan James Ketchersid Joe Knapp:nberg;r Miltjn Kohrs Ben Kohrs Dorothy Krig Harold Kugler Eddie Lamb Horace Lamborn Olga Larsen John Latta Walter Lewis Donald Long Ada Lorimer Myra Lorimer Lois Lumb Wilma Marsh Allen Mayhew Florence Melchert lola Meier Robert Miller Alvin Mistier Howard Moreen Maxine Morehead Roland Munsel Gaylord Munson Royce Murphcv Lowell Mvler Mollie McBride Edwin McColm Donald McKenzie Nevelyn Nelson Norris Nelson Herbert Niles lean Nixjn Marion Nolan Richard Nun Myra Ogg Christine Overlev Harold Overley Newell Page Gross Page Margaret Paige Robert Paige Ruth Parcels Earl Parsons Frank G. Parsons Martha Lou Perkins Wilfred Pine Lucile Piper Lewis Reemes James Rexroad Arden Rhinehart Rachel Edith Roberts George Rogler Ethel Rosey Orville Ruth Mildred Schlickau Opal Schlickau Vida Schmidler Lebert Schultz John Scott Juinita Shields Karl Shaemaksr Robert Spencer Eldon Stephenson Doris Streeter Frank Stuckey Eugene Sundgren Marian Stahlman Willett Taylor Dwight Thompson Kenneth Thompson Arthur Thomson Marion Thompson Ned Thompson Penn Thompson Willis Thompson Gladys Tonn Blanche Tomson Linford Truax Claude Uhrig Margaret Van Orsdal Raymond Wagner Virginia Wagner Wilbur Wahl Harold Walker Magdalenr Wenger William Wishart Ruby Wilson Veldi Wmd.T Electr YojTg Ii;Zitnik o r O f o 2tM Pearce Page Anderson ' oxall Denton Pme Burson Loveless Kuhrs Holm 1 Quantic Schruben Brandenburg Niies Steele THE AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS CLUB OFFICERS Orville Denton ---.-_.. Prrsidtiir Harold Kugler __.._ Vice-President Newell Page - Coirespoiidmg Secretary Marion Pearce Recording Secretary Luke M. Schruben -... Treasurer PHI LAMBDA UPSILON OFFICERS E. S. Shonyo _.. President R. M. Conrad ----- Vice-Presidtnt J. R. Cribbett - - Secretary J. R. Long ------ Treasurer HaymonJ Roepke Bceson Shnnvo Conrad ers Warner Dr an Winkle Kuukvater ' Vickburg Martin Cnhhett Solt Dr King Dr Hall Ploger KLOD AND KERNEL KLUB Purpose: To further the professional interests of students in agronomy. OFFICERS AND MEMBERS H. W. Clutter, President J. R. Latta, Vice-President F. E. Davidson, Secretary V. W. Silkett, Treasurer D. M. Atkins D. R. Cornelius G. S. Fox J. O. Miller F. G. Parsons L. H. Bacon R.J. Dicken L. B. Hanson Alvin Morgan G, A. Rogler D. H. Bowman A. B. Erhart j. W. Hunter N. W. Nelson Olin Sandlin L. R. Chilson C E, Fisher A. E. Lowe BLOCK AND BRIDLE CLUB Purpose: To further the professional interests of students in animal husbandry. OFFICERS AND MEMBERS J. I. Miller, President (1) E. C. Coulter, Vice-Pres. (1) R. B. Wagner, Secretary (1) L. R. Daniels, Treasurer (1) H. A. Moreen, Pres. (2) W. M. Lewis, Vice-Pres. (2) R. R. Teagarden, Sec ' y. (2) E. E. Sundgren, Treas. (2) E. P. Anderson C. W. Ater L. J. Brewer H. M. Brown V. E. Burnet B. R. Cathcart W. S. Coblentz Dani, Murphe Cohlent Ketche L. H. Cool, Jr. H. A. Daily H. F. Fulker P. W. Griffith H. R. Hein J. R. Ketchersid H. C. Love R. W. Lukens J. V. Mather D. K. McKenzK J. E. McColm G. R. Munson C. E. Murphey H, T. Niles H. W. Overbey C. H. Rupp L. J. Sconce A. C. Thomson A. A. Thornbrough E. A, Ward Tcagar AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS Kansas State Chapter OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER E. J. Peltier Pnsiditit R. C. Mclntire J. B. Stephenson Vici-Pnsidint -------- L. V. Teall E. E. Comstock Stcrttary - - -R. E. Eberle R. C. Mclntire ------- Triasurir Major Bliss MEMBERSHIP D. A. Adell, C. E., 4 J. D. Astle, C. E , 4 B. D. Baker, C. E., 3 J. S. Biggs, C. E., 4 John G. Black, C. E., 3 M. G. Bliss, C. E., 3 V. E. Bradley, C. E., 4 E. C. Brookover, C E , 3 C. L. Burr, C. E, 3 F. W. Caldwell, C E., 3 V. L. Carter, C E, 3 C. D. Chalmers, C. E, 3 V. T. Chapman, C. E., 3 D. W. Collins, C. E., 3 E. E. Comstock, C. E., 4 L. P. Cory, C E , 4 G. L. Cubbison, C. E., 3 W. B. Davis, C. E, 3 M. H. Davison C. E, 4 W. L. Dole, C. E., 3 J. A. Doubrava, C. E., 4 R. E. Eberle, C E., 4 G. W. Edelen, C E., 3 O. O. Ediger, C. E., 3 H F. E.er, C. E., 3 Gene Ellis, C. E,, 4 L. G. Elser, C. E., 4 R. F. Exline, C. E., 3 Voight Fisher, C E., 3 D, G. Gentry, C E., 3 N. F. Gibson, C- E, 4 F. H. Goodrich, C E., 4 D. C. Green, C. E , 3 J. H. Gumm, C E., 3 L. C Howard, C. E., 4 Archie Huey, C. E, 3 W. E. Laird, C. E., 4 D. V. Maxwell, C. E., 3 F. .]. Mayer, C E., 3 J- A. Meredith, C. E., 3 P. R, Miller, C. E., 3 J. M. Mills, C. E,, 4 H. H. Munger, C. E., 3 K. D. McCall, C. E., 3 Harold McElroy, C. E , 4 Herbert McCollom, C. E., R. C. Mclntire, C E., 4 T. F. McMahon, C E., 4 R. M. Nelson, C. E , 3 E. M. Newman, C E., 4 G. G. Noble, C. E., 3 E. G. Orrick, C. E, 3 E.J. Peltier, C. E., 4 M. E. Phillips, C. E., 4 G. W. Porter, C. E., 3 J. S. Rader, C. E., 3 V. C. Rhodes, C. E., 3 L. W. Rice, C. E, 4 V. H. Roth, C. E., 3 M. R. Rover, C. E., 4 R. N. Salkcld, C. E., 3 B. H. Scott, C. E., 3 M. G. Seibel, C. E., 3 B. A. Sellers, C. E., 3 W. P. Simpson, C. E., 3 C. S. Skinner, C. E., 3 L- L- Smelser, C. E., 4 L.J. Smith, C E., 4 N. J. Sollenberger, C. E., 3 R. W. Spears, C. E., 3 E. R. Specht, C. E., 3 J. B. Stephenson, C. E, 4 T. B. Stone, C. E., 3 W. H. Sunderland, C. E., 3 D. E. Swift, C. E., 3 L. W. Teall, C. E., 4 F. A. Vaughn, C. E,, 3 Victor Venard, C. E, 3 C. H. Vinckier, C. E., 3 Loyal Van Doren, C. E., 3 S. C. Walker, C. E., 4 P. A. Walters, C. E., 4 W. T. Walters, C. E., 3 H. C. Weathers, C. E , 3 E. L. Wells, C. E., 4 M. W. Wilcox, C. E., 3 L. A. Wilson, C. E., 3 J. G. Woodruff, C. E., 4 STEEL RING jV TEMBERSHIP includes two representatives from each engineering department, one elected each semester. The organization was founded at Kansas State in 1927, and symbolizes the welding together of the seven departments in the division. _ OFFICERS K. U. Benjamin - President J. P. Woolcott Vice-President J. D. Woodruff Secretary-Treasurer R- C. Beslcr Marshal MEMBERSHIP R. J. Alexander A. K. Bader E. L. Barger K. U. Benjamin R. C. Besler M. H. Davison V. A. Elliott J. M. Ferguson L. A. Gore H. Hibbs P. W. Jenicek H. C. John son L. M. Jorgenson S. H. Keller J. B. Kepler R. I. Lockard F. S. Martin L. E. Murphy Hal McCord I. E. McDougal Ray Nelson E. J. Peltier H. M. Rivers Norman Sollcnberger L. G. Stukey H. C. Weathers W. N. Wallace J. D. Woodruff J. P. Woolcott J. E. Veatch Alexander Jenicek Murphy Benjamin Elliott Hibbs Keller Kepler McCord Peltier Weathers W.KllcOtl SIGMA TAU XTATIONAL honorary engineering fraternity. Epsilon chapter was installed in 1912. Sigma Tau awards three medals each year to sophomore engineers who rank highest in scholarship during their freshman year. OFFICERS S. R. Mudgc PriuJrnt R- B. Smith Vice-P,niJc)it P. F. Warner- - - Sicntary J. P. Kesler - Trtasurir Alexander Best Black Gavin Christy Collier Ekdahl Elliott Gentry Harger Haupt Hinchcliff Jenicek Kesler Long SIGMA TAU MEMBERSHIP R. J. Alexander C. F. Arens C. H. Black R. C. Beslcr R. W, Best V. C. Cavin Donald Christy G. R. Collier E. E. Comstoclc E. A. Cooper M. H. Davison 0. S. Ekdahl V. A. Elliott A. French D. G. Gentry L. A. Gore H. L. Greene A. A. Harger J. W, Haupt H. H. Heckendorn K. H. Hinchcliff P. V. Jenicek J. P. Kesler J. R. Long H. H. McCord 1. E. McDoueal R, H. McElroy F. S. Martin H. S. Maxwell S. R. Mudge A. R. Munns R. M. Nelson E. M. Newmar Marion E. Phil C. N. Palmer E. J. Peltier Hal Poole W R. Roberts A. W. Rucker L. L. Sraelser R. B. Smith W. R. Stewart D, E, Swift H, K, latum L. W. Teall F. A. Vaughn W. D. Vawter J. E. Veatch P. F. Warner H. C. Weathers J. P. Woolcott W, H. Sunderland ps McCord McDougal Mudge Munns Nelson Newman Peltier Phillips Roberts Rucker Stewart Tatum Teall Weathers Woolcott ALPHA KAPPA PSI A LPHA OMEGA chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi, professional, international commerce fraternity, was established in 1926. OFFICERS Larry Froclich ---------- President Clarence Gatch ' i tce-Prtsident Lawrence Antenen ---- _.-- Secretary Lorniar Pearman ------------------ Treasurer MEMBERSHIP Lawrence Antenen Clarence Gatch Lormar Pearman Vance Burch Lyman Hall Dale Pocock Larry Froelich Clark Kostner Al R. Wilson Antenen Froelich Pearman Hall PiK-Otk Kostn Wilsr PHI ALPHA MU ( ENERAL Science women ' s honorary organization, founded in 1921. Phi Alpha Mu awards fifty dollars to the - sophomore girl highest in scholarship at the close of each year. OFFICERS Gertrude Cowder - - President Dorothy Rcgier Vice-President Marjorie Pyle .-.----..- - Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERSHIP Dorothy Black man Gertrude Covvdcry Ruth Obenland Virginia Peterson Marjorie Pyle Harriet Reed Dorothy Regier Merle Ross Selma Turner Iva Zimmerman Blackm Pyle Cowdery Ross Griffith Haggart Henney Schnacke Stiles THETA SIGMA PHI VTATIONAL honorary professional journalism fraternity for women. Founded April 8, 1909, at the University of Washington. Mu chapter installed June 5, 1916. FIRST SEMESTER Marv Alice Schnacke Edith Dohson Ruth Stiles - OFFICERS President Secretary Tre, SECOND SEMESTER Mayrie Griffith Virginia Haggart - Ruth Stiles PI EPSILON PI T AMPUS CATS is the local chapter of the national men ' s pep organization, Pi Epsilon Pi. OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER K. U. Benjamin - - President K. U. Benjamin O. A. Attwood Vice-President ------- O. A. Attwood H. C. Johnson Secretary H. C. Johnson H. B. Brandon - Treasurer H. B. Brandon Eychner .Attumd Fulmcr ?v BJdinglon Kastncr IVn.iamin . ' rcns F, , G Fox. D. Stuke Stewart Kimhall Berrvi Ne Van . ke ' I ' his scholastic honorary orgai 1915- Omicron Nu awards ten Home Economics. Ind Margaret Haceart in Mav, 1 ■[scholarship in the Division of OFFICERS Ivalee Hedge- --__ __......_ Presidcit Elizabeth Crawford ------- -.-- Vice-President Mary Holton- --------- _--- Secretary Irene Todd ----------- .--.--. Treaswer MEMBERSHIP Margaret Ahlhorn Tessie Agan jane Barnes Nina Browning Ida Chitwocd Ina Cowks Elizabeth Crawford Florence Day Ivalee Hedge Mabel Hodgson Mary Holton Roberta Jack Margaret Justin Leone Kell Amy Kelly Martha Kramer Alpha Latzke Ingovar Leighton Ruth McCammon Thelma McClure Martha Pittman Elizabeth Quinlan Wilma Reinhardt Lyla Roepkc Martha Rodda Louise Rust Lucille Rust Dorothy Saville Florence Thompson Irene Todd Ruth Tucker Gladys Vail Mary P. Van Zile Bessie B. West Sina Faye Fowler Helen Roberts CrawfnrJ Hedge Reinhardt ■..[ OFFICERS Prot. Ada Rice - - - _ . . _ Pusidtnt Prof. L. E. Conrad - Vm-Presidmt Dr. C. H. Kitselman ...__.__ Keconiiiig Secretary Ass ' t Dean C. M. Correll CorresponJing Secretary Ass ' t Dean M. A. Durland --- Treasurer DHI kappa phi is an all-college Honor Society dedicated to the unity and democracy of education. The organiza- tion is open to honor students of all departments of American colleges and universities. Its prime object is to empha- size scholarship and character in the thought of college students and to stimulate mental achievement by the prize of membership. The upper ten percent in each division may be elected to membership in any one ' ear. During the present college -ear forty-nine under graduates, six graduate students, and six faculty members were elected to membership. THE Y. W. C. A. Miss Dorothy McLcod -------------- Genera! Secretary Mary Alice Schnacke -- President Beulah Leach ------------ Vice-President Barbara Lautz - ' - - Secretary Dorothv Blackman ----------------- Treasurer CABINET MEMBERS Viola Barron Dorothv Blackman Louise Chalfant Blanch Christensen Velma Capper Marcia Conrad Ruth DeBaun Jessie Dean Esther Dorgan Muriel Fulton Mayrie Griffith Margaret Green Sue Irons Zora Knox Elizabeth Lamprecht Ruth Langenwalter Barbara Lautz Beulah Leach Betty Ozment Frances Rosser Aileen Rundle Mary Alice Schnacke Esther Wiedower Winifred Wolf OFFICERS OF FRESHMAN COMMISSION FIRST SEMESTER Margaret Green Frances Tannahil Ruth DeBaun lone Hill Ellen Pa nc - Pauline Steiner President - Vice-President - - - - - Secretary - - - - - - Social Chairman - - - - - Program Chairman ------- Ellen Pa ' ne Publicity Chairman Ruth Gresham SECOND SEMESTER Margaret Green Frances Tannahill Ruth DeBaun - - lone Hill Blackman Leach Dean DeBaun Lamprecht RunJIc Schnacke Dorgan Lautz Woll KAPPA BETA OFFICERS Louise Chalfanr Pr,s,dmt Esther Walters V,ce-Pns,dent Helen Nicmeier - - Secrnary Williamette Thomas Cor. Stcritary Pearl Doole Almnni Secritary Bessie Wilson r ,„ Kepmer Emma Ann Storcr Treasurer MEMBERSHIP Chalfant, Louise Cless, Thelma Cook, Orlena Cook, Bertha Cooper, Mary E. Crawford, Elizabeth DeBaun, Ruth Doornbos, Frances Fulks, Elsie Hedge, Ivalee Johnson, Marie Kline, Doris Landrum, Florence Lewellen, Lois McBride, Mildred Marble, Geneva Martin, Delite Niemeier, Helen Roniger, Elizabeth Sexson, Hollis Smerchek, Helen Steele, Maurine Storer, Emma Ann Tcdman, Helen Thomas, Williamette Taylor, Dorothy Walters, Esther Wandling, Vona Wilson, Bessie Zimmerman, Iva May Roniger Kn.-rr ill 1 ' ,. I , ri n, ' ,. r lar en Wllsev Davis Holman, K Cru v nlr,m rcnsman Slewart Sv%ank Ploger Van OrsJol Conrad Keller Johnson Holman R Jorgenson Fritz Keck Hushes Thompson Holman. Mrs. Smelhrusl Nuzman Wylie t-rey 0 erley Allman Capper Astic Rogers Byers KAPPA PHI National organization of Methodist university women, established here March 5, 1921. Membership 62 Mrs. Rev. B. A. Rogers --------- - - - Sponsor OFFICERS Marv Elizabeth Allman - - - - - President Marcia Conrad ----- Vice-Presidenf Bculah Prey - - ------ Secretary Rosema Holman ------ . - . - Treasurer Zelda Kleven ------------------ Chaplin Irma Lyle Stanberr)- ------------ Historian THETA PI Organization of Presbyterian women students, founded at Kansas State in 1923- Sutter Latta Maixner Schob irwin .VIcK.nlcy Buikstr lennev Lohen Blackman Knechtel _ Shields Rowland McKmney.F. Pyle Hoyt Morgan. Muriel Morgan. Mary Gresham McKinncy. K. Burson NEWMAN CLUB Catholic student organization, founded at Manhattan in 1913. OFFICERS Lillis R. Wempe - - _ . President Mary Catherine Ryan ---_.. Vm-President Mary Frances Hurley - - Secrctaiy-Treasurer THE WISE CLUB Student Organization of the Episcopal Church. OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Whitney Teall - - President Elizabeth Scott Maurine Lewis ------- Viee- President - George Kerr Hazel Grant ------- Secretary-Treasurer Robert Blanciie Councilors: Miss Gratia Burns, Miss Emma Hyde, Miss Dorothy Barfoot, Mr. R. L Thackrev, Mrs. R. I. Thackrey, Rev. W. A. [onnard. K r Sclt Tcall Is ORCHESIS Honorary interpret ve dancing orga OFFICERS Tization for women. Arlene Smith Pr sldetir Lucille Johnt r -T,- asmv z - - - - - MEMBERSHIP Lucille Alinian Margaret Carr Roberta Odle Arlene Smith Juliana Amos Ivcrnia Danielson Marianne Ozment Lois Stingley Zelda Ackenhausen Lucille Johntz Margaret Patterson Ernestine Young Mary Brookshier Ambrosia McClaren Lois Rosencrans Evelyn Young Jeanette Moser Rosemary Schmidt aC TIVITIES OOH lour % Cedar Creek, Northeast of Manhattan, In Early Spring -yn-- - ftp ■x ■■' k. «-. % rlmto h]l .lam.:, M.u-li, ]. Oh My, says Given, I must have turned left instead ot right. 2. For shame, Shafcr. 3. That ' s better. Now we can sec you. 4. Who ' s that in the bushes? 5. Hutchinson from Hutchin- son. 6. The winning Fisher-Crawford dancinj; team chosen at the Co-ed Prom. 7. Come out from behind that brush-pile Johnson, we know you. S. Spud and her shadow. 9. Dusty Rhodes of Beta Theta Pi. I. Three Ags. 2. What, no pick up! 3 Lambda Chi goes Ma- harma Gandhi. 4. What ' s she doing in this school? 5. Is there a doctor in this crowd? 6. Two hoys, or a picnic? 7. Roberta Downic. 8. Mary,, vvhere ' s Jean? 9. Just in case of war. 10. Couple of Tn-Delts )ust having cobs of fun. 11. Two Zeta Taus. 12. Hartman and Murphy with their latest catch. . . P. S. Not an , lpha Delt. 13- Hi, Roscoe. How ' s vou all 14. Girls, be careful of Stratford when he unwinds. 1. The beauties of tlie Scabbard and Blade initiation, 2 Clovia ' s Dutch cleanser maids. 3. Ethel Fairbanks and K. U. Benjaniin. St. Fat and St. Patricia of the Engineer ' s Ball. 4. The happy reunion when Helen Louise Davis returns from California to lonesome Russel. 5. The outline most studied. 6. Lillian Munal using her .southern tactics on Don Fox to the displeasure of John Reinecke. 7. Esther Walters and Bing Baum. 8. An interesting studv. 9. Martha Jane Singleton and Jane Harman. h HoNv Skradski rates with Graham. 2. Founder of Over the Back Fence in the front lines of the first semester ' s Collegian staff. 3. Uncle Sam, Phi Delt pledge. 4. Here ' s to Mary, the little hotcha dear, who spends Bceson ' s money and drinks his 5. Cy Sartoriusof Phi Delt fame. 6. Gee! Betty and pin. 7. The four-leaf clovers of Clovia. 8. Bus Bovd getting childish. 9. Phi Delt Luder. 10. Inside and insides of the Kappa Sig house. ,, «a:f- ' - ,o j, ' maV.e ' • sweeter. 5 5 Yahde McClYmonds Mr. March was asked to select the most beautiful girl in each of five types. The order in which the girls appear here does not indicate any difference in ranking. Miss McClymonds was select- ed as typifying Demure beauty. She is a member of Pi Beta Phi. m ' M ■«;.4«t. Mar.Y Whilelaw Miss Whitelaw was selected as representative of Vivacious beauty. She is a member of Delta Delta Delta. ia SiiniS! li to oague Miss Poague was chosen by Mr. March for her Exotic and Charming beauty. She is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Beriha White Miss White was singled out as an example of Aristocratic beauty. She is a member of Alpha Delta Pi. « ' AUc e Kimball Miss Kimball was picked by Mr. March to represent the Sports type. She is a member of Alpha Xi Delta. argarel Mary Reddy KANSAS i TATE SWEETHEART Miss Reddy was chosen as Sweetheart of Kansas State by students attending the Kansas State Sweethearts ' Ball. She is a member of Chi Omega. FRANKLIN THACKREY IN CONCLUSION REALIZING that the last two Roval Purples lost money, and that we would have less to spend than they, this staff determined to balance its budget. In order to do this, several organizations, individuals, and activities which ordinarily fail to pay for their space were eliminated. If we show favor to some groups, it is because they gave the financial support that made this yearbook possible. There will be some mistakes in this, as in every book; some unintentional omissions, some things we would like changed. There will be some things vou don ' t like ... for each yearbook is a compromise ot many different tastes. We have had to change our plans many times, but we have enjoyed our work, learned many things, and feel content to have the lob completed. We sincerely hope you like It. If you don ' t, we invite vou, in the best of humor, to try it yourself sometime. THE 1933 ROYAL PURPLE STEPHEN VESECK1 ' STAFF ASSISTANTS EDITORIAL Margaret Mary Reddy ---- _.-_..._. Humor Adrian Sorrels ---.. Humor Edith Dobson - - Edttortai Assistant Kenneth Harter- - Sports Jessie Dean Publicity BUSINESS Clay Reppert Mark Kannal ' irginia Haggarc Fletcher Wellemeyer R. L, Parker - - Business Assistant ness Assistant ness Assistant Assistant ness Assistant A T THE beginning of the year, it was agreed that the staff member who did the most consistent work through the year should be named associate editor. In fulfillment of this promise, Miss Feme Vesecky has been named associate editor of the 1933 Royal Purple. wo faculty members appointed hv the President and three students selected from the student body at large by the Student Council supervise the publication of the Royal Purple. Members of the board select nominees for each of the several offices, supervise the letting of contracts and act as a governing board for the staff. T FACULTY MEMBERS Prof. H. W. Davis, Chairman Prof. E. T. Keith R. J. Alexander Mary Houser STUDENT MEMBERS R. L. Parker Fern Veseckv T THE KANSAS STATE COLLEGIAN HE Kansas State Collegian, the college newspaper, which is issued Tuesday and Friday of each week during the college vear, is published by the students taking Journalism courses. STAFF FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER Ward Colwcll Editor John Reinecke Clav Reppert Business Marnier Clav Reppert Nelson Reppert - Ass ' t Business M viazer Nelson Reppert COLLEGIAN BOARD npHE Collegian Board elects the principal members of the staff of the college paper and indirectly supervises its policies. MEMBERSHIP Maurice DuMars Prof. C. E. Rogers Mayrie Griffith Mary Alice Schnacke Kenneth Harter Ralph Van Camp THE KANSAS STATE ENGINEER Monthly periodical published for engineering students. Founded 1915- M. H. Davison K. U. B;njimin Bushliss M-Jilaiir EDITORI. L ST. FF R. J. Alexander J. P. Woolcott P. V. Jenicek Leonard Carrel R. D. Compton H. E. Rathbun Ass ' t Editor - Campus Editor - Alumni Editor Technical Editor - Feature Editor - Art Editor BUSINESS STAFF J. P. Kesler - - - Circulation Manager Raymond Nelson- - - - - Ass ' t Circulation Manager Robert Chambers - . - - Ass ' t Circulation Manager L. B. Izard Ass ' t Circulation Manager H.C.Johnson ------ Advertising Manager Cecil Arens Ass ' t Advertising Manager F. CULTY ADVISERS Prof. J. P. Calderwood Ass ' t Dean M. A. Durland R. D. Crist A. K. Bader DEPARTMENT EDITORS R. W. Best H. M. Rivers H. R. Heckendorn MANAGING BOARD E.J. Peltier M. H. Davisc n Oscar Ekdahl Crist Bader Nelson Benjamin Ekdahl Peltier l:ard Best Rathbun L- A. Gore K. U. Beajamin Carrel Johnson Woolcott t COSMOPOLITAN CLUB ' OSMOPOLITAN CLUB, a club of foreign and American students, was founded in May, 1921. Its purpose is to promote a spirit of brotherhood among students of all nationalities, develop among them a better understanding, develop the spirit of human justice and co-operation, for the betterment o f humanity. OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Louise Chalfant ------- President Romayne Cribbett - Vice-President Vera Ellithorpe ------- Kec. Secretary Nathan Fligstein ------- Car. Secretary Salvador Delia - - - - - , - - Treasurer Julio Arrojo -------- Marsha Myrtle Zenet - - --.- - Alumni Secretar SECOND SEMESTER Louise Chalfant Romayne Cribbett Vera Ellithorpe Nathan Fligstein - Julio Arrojo - E. A. Perez Myrtle Zener ADVISERS Jessie McDoNvell Machi Ruth McCammon MEMBERSHIP Arrojo, Julio Horn, Elsa Babcock, Dean Rodney V. Jelinek, Josephine Cardenis, Caesar Joseph, Helen Chalfant, Louise Kell, Eugene Cribbett, Ro mayne Knerr, Frances Das, Stephen Knerr, Margaret Delia, Narcissus Look, William Delia, Salvador Lyon, Jeanne De Soto, Sierra McCammon, Ruth Ellithorpe, Vera Machir, Jessie McDowell Everhardv, Louise McLeod, Dorothy Ferguson, John Melchers, L. E. Fligstein, Nathan Melton, Alice Hebert, Achille Morgensen, Vendla Pilla Das Dc Soto Morsensen Horn Look Ferguson Veat Staicer Jelinek t Knerr, M. Melton Z Rodne - W. Babcock Nomura, Paul Owens, Jolouetta Perez, E. A. Rader, Julia Rogers, Rev. B. A. Staicer, Irimie Stiles, Marion Todd, J. Sherman Taberner, Francisco Thompson, Mrs. Eusehia Veatch, John Ward, Laura White, A. E. ithorpe Nomur; AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATION THE Agricultural Association includes all the undergraduate students in the Division of Agriculture. Its purpose is to look after the interests and sponsor the activities of the students of the division as a whole and to coordinate the activities of departmental groups. John I. Miller, Prescott Wavne Burbank, Benton - President Vice-Preildfiir C. Dean McNeal, Bo ie ------- Secretary Wilfred H. Pine, Lawrence - Treasurer AG BARNWARMER THE outstanding fall social event of the students in the Division of Agriculture is the Ag Barnwarmer. A popular co-ed is elected queen and presented at the dance. Miss Luella Graham of Topeka was elected queen of the 1932 Barnwarm er. STAFF Arthur C. Thomson, McCune ------ Manager Robert R. Teagarden, LaCygne - - - - Ajs ' r Manager Marion W. Pearce, Miltonvale Miss Lnclla Graham, Top:ka - Treasurer - Q iteen Miss Luella Graha Arthur C. Thomson SENIOR LIVE STOCK JUDGING TEAM IN THE greatest of the season ' s judging contests at the International Live Stock Exposition, November 26, 1932, the Kansas State Senior Live Stock Judging Team placed second with twenty teams from the United States and Canada competing. THE KANSAS AGRICULTURAL STUDENT The quarterly publication of the students of the Division of Agriculture. EDITORIAL AND BUSINESS STAFF G. R. Munson P. H. Hostetler - F. S. Burson, Jr. - A. A. Thornbrough K. S. Davis - - M. W. Pearce L. M. Schrubcn - Editor Associate Editor Business Manager Ass ' t Business Aianager - College Notes - Alumni Notes Farm Notes O. F. Denton Agricultural Economics A. B. Erhart Agronomy J. I. Miller - Animal Husbandry F. W. Cistello Dairy Husbandry Erwin Abmeyer -------- Horticulture R. T. Hirprr Poultry Husbandry Prof. Hugh Durhim - Advisory Editor Davi Burson Pear. Munsn Denton Hostetlei Erhart Prof Lyman J. Brat;ler, Coach Haruld L, Kugic Gavlord R. Mun MEN ' S MEATS JUDGING TEAM HE Meats Judging Team, coached by Prof. Lyman J. Bratzler, won the American Royal contest in Kansas City, bringing to K. S. C. for the second consecutive year the National Meat Board trophy. In the contest at the Inter- national Live Stock Exposition in Chicago the team placed fourth with eight competitors. T HOME ECONOMICS MEATS JUDGING TEAM HE 1932 Women ' s Meats Judging Team was trained by Prof. Lyman J. Bratzler of the Department of Animal Hus- bandry. Their inter-collegiate contest failed to materialize for no fault of theirs. The purpose of these contests is: (1) To give the contestants practice in judging meats as a basis for choosing meats wisely. (2) To establish a criterion bv which teams from this college can be compared with teams from other colleges. T Prut. Lyman J. Br; Fern Falkinhurgh Geneva Sutter POULTRY JUDGING TEAM ' T HE judging team with the outstanding record for the year. Did they win in the Mid-West Inter-collegiate contest, - November 26, 1932? They were awarded four of the five trophies offered and $30 in cash. Eight states were repre- sented in the contest. CROPS JUDGING TEAM npHE Inter-CollegiateCrops Judging Team competed in two contests, at the American Royal, November 12, and the - International Live Stock Exposition, November 26, 1932. There were five teams in the former and eight in the latter. The placings were close and the Kansas team made a creditable record. MARGARET JUSTIN HOME ECONOMICS CLUB The Margaret Justin Home Economics Club is a professional organization for women enrolled m home economics. OFFICERS . . Elizabeth Crawford ..------..- - - - Pre tdan Martha Rodda -------;■.■-- ' -P ' Mollis Sexton - - - --: - - ::- - - -. Santary , t - K ■_-_--- ' ' ------ Treasurer Mane Antrim • CLASS REPRESENTATIVES Senior Sophomore . . . Beulah Leach Elizabeth Lamprecht Sue Irons Ruth Jorgenson Junior Freshman Florence McKinney Myra Ogg Clara Bess Garrison Virginia Dole COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN Justine Brening Aileen Rundle Mae Gordon Louise Rust Roberta Jack Lorena Schieramer Betty Ozment Pauline Vail Elizabeth Pittman Antrim Crauford Dole Gordon Jack Lamprecht Leach McKinney Ormcnt Rodda Rundle Schlemnicr Sexton Vail KANSAS STATE ENGINEERING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS S. R. Mudge - - . - _ Preudent J. P. Woolcott -.. Vice-Presitlein Hal McCordjJr. Secretary K. U. Benjamin -- Treasurer R. J. Alexander ...._. Manager Open House Mudge ENGINEER ' S OPEN HOUSE COMMITTEE Manager — Robert}. Alexander Secretary — Vorras A. Elliott Publicity — R. D. Compton, H. C. Johnson, L. W. Teall Features and Display — E. J. Peltier, 1. E. McDougal, Clair Palmer Routing — J. D. Woodruff, J. P. Woolcott, Ray Nelson Prom — Carl Ossman, O. S. Eckdahl Aviation — L. A. Gore Chapel — K. U. Benjamin Shop Practice — L. E. Murphy Machine Design — Roy Best, Leonard Izard Agricultural Engineering — P. W. Jenicek, Don Christv Architecture — Harry Ganstroni, Keith HinchclifT, A. K. Bader Civil Engineering — M. E. Philips, Don Gentry, H. C. Weathers Chemical Engineering — P. F. Warner, H. M. Rivers, John Long Electrical Engineering — H. R. Heclcendorn, A. V. Rucker, Oran Harger Mechanical Engineering — V. C. Cavin, Richard Burdge, H. K. Tatum Military — Hal McCord, R. C. Bcsler, Robert Roberts Applied Mechanics — J. P. Kesler, J. W. Haupt Physics— J. H. Howard Signs — H. E. Rathbun, H. E. Rivers Publications — M. H. Davison Floodlighting — Russel Stewart, Irving Johnson MORTAR BOARD Honorary organization for senior women, recognizing service, leadership and scholarship. Installed at Kansas State May 26, 1928. OFFICERS ,. , ,, ____.---- FresidiUt Louise Cnaltant ,,, i, Vice-Preiiaent Mary Lou Clark - _,,, Secretary Roberta Jack- - - ■_,(.., ..-- Treasurer Ruth Stues PRIX Junior women ' s honorary, founded at Kansas State in 1916. Members selected on a basis of scholarship, leadership, and participation in college activities. OFFICERS „,T. President Barbara Lautz ,,,.,,,. Vice-President Kathrvn Mckinney .,. ' 1 _ Secretary-Treasurer Marcia Conrad - ,,,, TTix _--------- rAarshal Helen Morgan ni I Tnnrad Griffith Lautz McK.nn: ' : N4cK,nney. K ' ' ° ' ' Melchcrt Roth Sexton Cope Cook Onioh u n J ro Gouge Twiehaus Butler MaJisun Coble Van Sant ■llison Lassen Bright Myrah Murphy Howard Twiehaus Fechner STUDENT CHAPTER AMERICAN VETERINARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION SOPHOMORES -le cll „ Frahm M„uw ickclui.sc Millcnhrudi M iller Watson Wiswell I- ' ischer btDcklasa Hibbs Ktiappcnlxri!er Wcmpc I-echncr Krai Vicrlins StafforJ Asbill Waddeil Hcrvcv Donat Cavanaugh Hook Mcf aJJcn Kliilunbruch Manges Johnson Prehal Sadler ' Kelley Mace Schmidt Kclsall WiMiamson M issa 1 •f ' f ft rt ' r yj JUNIORS Nelson Metcalf Thiele Nichols Henslev Merriman Long Kest r Miller Com zz Cox Sklar McDonald Rippetoe STUDENT CHAPTER AMERICAN VETERINARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION FIRST SEMESTER W. H. Lindlcy William Angerer H. L. Kester - P. E. Chleboun Frestdcnt Vtce-Presidcnl Secretary Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER A. S. Robertson C. D. Stafford - E. W. Peck E. L. Metcalf SENIORS Alcorn Thompson Reineccius Brandlv Mcrkley SnoJgras Brunkc McGinnis Angcn Allen Lindley Smith Gump McLean Robertson Kastner Rush Nieberding Firth Bond Blackburn Anderson Turk Prchal Shaner Hakl Hudson Finke Peck Cady Gcilenfeldt Conger Ludloff Curry THE FRIARS SENIOR men ' s honorary, in which membership is based on scholarship, leadership and service to the school. Each vcar twelve outstanding Juniors are chosen to carry on the work of the senior class the following year. OFFICERS Russell Smith - Fresidt«t K. U. Benjamin ----- - Vice-President Stephen Vcseckv - Semtan-Treasure- MEMBERSHIP 1932-33 R.J. .Mexander S. R. Mudge K. U. Benjamin D. F. Pocock M. L. DuMars Russell B. Smith L. K. Firth Franklin Thackrc L. E. Garrison Stephen Vesecky W W Zek ser DEPARTMENT OF MILITARY TRAINING npHE department of militarv science and tactics was established under the Mornl act, accepted bv the state of Kansas in February, 1863- Military instruction at Kansas State has made consistent and notable progress since the inauguration of the Reserve Officers ' Train- ing Corps in the leading educational institutions of our country. The efforts and team work of the cadets, and those in immediate charge of their instruction, coupled with the hearty support of the head of the institution, finally placed Kansas State in 1927, in that selected class officially recognized and designated in orders bv the War Department as Distinguished. In addition to the training given in the technical and tactical handling of weapons of war, stu- dents are instructed in command, leadership, teamwork, respect for constituted authority, and citizenship. This department not only aims to prepare its students to take their proper places in a time of national military emergency, but endeavors also to assist them, in a measure, with information and guidance designated to be valuable in the more usual times of peace. The regiment this vear has maintained the high standard set by its predecessors and has reflected credit upon Itself and the institution bv its work. MILITARY F. -CI iLTY Lieutenant-Colonel John S. Sullivan, Inf. PMS T. Ma|or Thomas O. Humphreys, C. . . C. Senior Instr. C. A. C. Unit. Ma|or H. E. Van Tuyl, Veterinary Corps. Captain Ellsworth Young, C. A. C. Captain W. A. Swift, Inlantry Senior Instr. Infantry Unit. Captain W. F. Rehm, Infantry Captain I. E. Ryder, Infantry Adjutant of the Unit. Lieutenant H. H. Mvrah, C. A. C. NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS Harvev H. Allen, Staff Sergeant, Inf. Rov E. Wilson, Sergeant, C. A. C. John E. Seay, Staff S;rgeant, Inf. Harvv O. Williams, Staff Sergeant, Inf. FIRST SEMESTER L. H. Dalton M. E. Matter L. E. Garrison D. F. Pocock R. O. Smith - CADET STAFF OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER Colonel - - -L.H, Dalton - Lteur. Colonel H. H. McCord, Jr. Major ------ Arthur B. NiemoUer Major C.J. Becson Ma or E. H. Reed 1. The military ball was one ol the colorful parties of the year. Cadet oH iters and honorary colonels stand at attention while station KSAC goes on the air. 2. Eyery one in step during inspection. 3. And the good soldier gets his medals, even in the R. O, T. C. 4. Another view of the same group. 5. All the boys who go to camp tell lots of stories about what happened after taps, or how they got sun-burned, 6. The big boys look the army over every spring and give it a rating. 7. The military- band keeps time Cthoiigh perhaps not tune). Miss Adelaine Reid, lola, senior in home economics, an honorary major. Miss Reid is a member oi Chi Omega. Miss Ethel Fairbanks, Manhattan, sophomore in commerce, an honorary major. Miss Fairbanks is a member of Alpha Delta Pi. Miss Colleen Zacharias, Oak Mills, freshman in chemical engi- neering. Miss Zacharias was chosen as honorary colonel. Miss Ruth DeBaun, Topcka, freshman in industrial |ournalism, an honorary major. SCABBARD AND BLADE NATIONAL honorary military society for cadet officers. The original society was founded in 1905 at Wisconsin University. L Company, First Regiment, was established at Kansas State in June 1914. OFFICERS C. Beeson -------- Captain L. E. Garrison F ' ' LnuMia„t D F Pocock ----------- ' Second Lientinant R. C. Besler ------- P ' ' Sngeant MEMBERS Anderson, H L Arcns, C. F. Bader. A. K. Beeson, C. Bcrryman. C. P. Besler, R. C. Berry, L. N. Benjamin, K. U. Criner, E. E. Dicke, W. E. Dixon, D. D. Doolittle, H. H Ferguson. G. D, Fox, Donald Garrison, L. E. Hibbs, H. C Hughes, C E. Johnston, D. G. Kaeser, W. G. Klinger, D. D. Landon, D. C. McBride, L. L. Merklev, E. D. Metcalfe, E. L. Morgan, L. T. McCord, Hal, Jr. Ornck, E. G, Pocock, D. F. Perrier, F. Renwanz, R. H, Scales, B. C Smelser, L. L. Stukey, L. G. Van Doren, L. R. Stukey Hughes Ande ' ' an Doren riner Renwan Khnger Pocock Benjarr Page in MORTAR AND BALL Kansas State chapter of Mortar and Ball, national honorary society for cadets in artillery. Installed July, 1926. FIRST SEMESTER D. B. McCord B. C. Forbes - B. E. Hammond A. B. Niemoller OFFICERS SECOND SEMESTER Captain G. D. Ferguson ■First Lieutenant R. V. Woodward Second Lieutenant W. R. Roberts ■First Sergeant J.M.Ferguson E. L. Broghamer O. H. Douglas G. F. Ely C. W. Evans R. C. Eychner G. D. Ferguson J. M. Ferguson B. C. Forbes H. H. Harris J. L. Hartman B. E. Hammond W. G. Heer MEMBERSHIP P. N. Hines C. L. Howard w C Lacy w F Laird A. C. Lundgren D B. McCord T. H McNarv L. N Marx A E. Mavhew N R Meek A B. Niemoller C, D. Chalmers P. A. Neuschwanger E. G. Orrick W. R. Roberts B. A. Sellers H. S. Spear W. R. Stewart J. E. Veatch W. T. Walters O. M. Wells J. W. Wells R. V. Woodward G. L. Jobling HONORARY MEMBERS Major T. O. Humphreys Captain E. Young Lieutenant H. H. Myrah Lieutenant J. H. Madison Eychn Brogharr Stewart Laird Fergusi Wells, O. Robems Niemoller Ferguson, G. Veatch Humphr evs Myrah Hamr lond Douglas schwanger Wells.;. Woodward Lacv Walt Is This tHe fqRewOrD? A YE neighbor, and a dedication. In this section are mirrored some of the deeds, wholesome and unwholesome, and some of the extra- curricular activities of the institution ' s several hundred loval souls and some of the more prominent heels. If vour name appears herein, if vou (and vou and you) have become entangled in the skein of circumstances which has caused vour name to be blasphemed or vour face to embellish the following pages we hope that no ill feelings will arise. However, we are compassionate. If what is said causes your grandchildren ' s children ' s great grandchildren to change their names to Bildgewater or McCarthv, aye and verilv, then will we indeed grieve deeply. The section has been named The spoken or oral berrv (that i sound) is a sound of questionabli salutation made bv a low tvpe of the said person wishes to punctu; pressing the tongue firmlv betwei blowing a heavv blast. We ar( punctuate our oral blasphemies. rasp berry, gentle customer? A FARM HOUSE A PAIR of choke-bore pants and a kaleidioscopic vest and a general knowledge of how to swill pigs will get yon a hid to Farm House, and try to get rid of it. The organization was conceived by a group who wanted all the comforts of a home without having to give up the idea of being a fraternity man. Thev wanted outdoor plumbing, companions with w hich thev could talk about the hot winds and why the hogs wouldn ' t feed, a college education, and possibly space where thev could keep a cow. The Kansas State campus, being fertile ground for such an organization, found itself with this unique fraternity. The boys reside in a simple home and manage to get through four years of college without raising too much Ned. No bags of debauchery under their eyes. Tsk ' Tsk ' No! LAMBDA CHI ALPHA T AMBDA CHI, thy name is Ward Col well ! This organization - ' — ' is in for a well deserved rest. The late Ward Colwell stripped the chapter of most of its prestige and years, my friends, and years will not wipe out the blight he emplanted in the once fertile soil of Lambda Chi. The rest of the boys have had to stand back out of the way for the last four years while the colorful Colwell (coloring meaning the blue bags under his eyes} got into high gear in campus politics. Like the three wise men who went to sea in a boat, if Ward Colwell had staved longer the smell would have been stronger. P  lgc S92 Let B Make Por i Official Photographer for the ROYAL PURPLE BETA THETA PI y BOUT the time the Riley county youngsters start losing their milk teeth, they can start looking forward to bids to Beta affairs. Thanks to Kappa Sigma, only a few of these innocents are sucked off their feet during rush week. Beta Theta Pi has been in the public eye enough to make it sore, thanks to the national chapter which is strong. The local is dominated by the Seaton family and periodically reformed by Ned Hell-just-call-me-Ncddie Kimball. Requirements for admittance into Beta Theta Pi are (1) thick glasses, (2) an ancient 8-cylinder dray, (3) a monthly bale of frogskins, and (4) an I-smell-tripe expression to be worn on state occasions. Nobody would want to meet Charley Team in a dark alley but he is one of the few prominent Betas. Others are Billy Guerrant who broods over his baldness, Pete Fairbank who stands six feet three when his corns are bad, and Dick Seaton who should not be mentioned. We almost forgot the most powerful man on the Campus, Tiny Pearman; but then there are so many things that arc powerful— vou take halitosis, or dipsomania, but why go on? The local worries National Headquarters something fierce, but if we were the National President we wouldn ' t investigate too closely, because a fallen Beta is a broken woman and a ghastly sight, and most of the local tong have reached bottom. BETA PHI ALPHA ' AME a slack in the Greek ' s occupation, disinterest among Vj the organized, and the founding of Beta Phi Alpha— a social sorority for the betterment of those who were unable to do better, and couldn ' t do worse if they wanted to. Founded for the protection of our feathered friends— and the use of Drano in the home . . . these husky nemisises plough in a slough of despondency and defeat. Each rush week two forlorn leftovers are taken in . . . and one initiated just to per- petuate the tribald race and bring glory to the hcarthside. They all go to a party a year . . . their own. To Whom it may Concern: I hereby and forthwith swear by the Yen Holy Toe Bones and my faith in Chi Omega that if i am elected Sweetheart of Kansas State for the yenr of our Lord 1933 I hereby and forthwith declare, announce, and promise to buy beer, pretzels, cheese, crackers, alcoholic beverages and sundries and any other thinf: or thinf s which might be reasonably requested by Franklin (Jessie Dean) Thackrey, Stephen (himself) Vesecky, clay (the same) Reppert, and associates. Signed in the presence of T lmer, the custodian. Notarj s sif n-t j.re and seal. Tk a. - Page g9i You ll find it here A STORE ' S first duty to the community is to give them the best in style and quality at reasonable prices— This we strive to do. Yon trill itlivays jind a tvelcome in our store. COMPLETE OUTFITTERS FOR THE COLLEGE GIRL Manhattan ' s Fine Department Store Stores Also Found in Junction City Lawrence Paola Garnett Fort Scott Chanute Parsons Coffeyville Nevada, Mo. Sedalia, Mo. THE ROYAL PURPLE ' S OWN TRUE AND FALSE QUIZ. CHECK YOUR CHERCE. Duke DuMars is a big man in Agra. Tub Smith is a big man in any town. A man was found on the second floor of the Beta house. Bob Wallerstedt is a male. Bob Wallerstedt is the Sigma Nu flower. Bob Wallerstedt is musclebound. We ' ve got it in for Bob Wallerstedt. Barbs are not as bad as Alpha Gamma Rho thinks thev are. With his dearth of brains Mark Kannal should not waste his time in school. The Pi Phis think Ebling is the nuts. Ebling is carding much wool over the eves of the chapter. Frank Prentup is a Pi Phi. Orren Grover is not socially prominent. He thinks he is. Purple Pepsters are Polish milkmaids. Pete Pocock is considered one of the big shots on the campus. Pete Pocock considers himself one of the big shots on the campus. People pity Pete Pocock. This is getting damned monotonous. Somebody will read this and like it. Somebody will read this but thev won ' t like it. 22. Jane Harma i should be boiled in oil. 23. There are some smart Kappa Sigs. 24. Bill Maxwell should be attended to. 25. A traveling bag is a Kappa on a street car. 26. That joke came out of Capper ' s Weekly in ' 03. 27. The Collegian is a newspaper distributed twice weekly. 28. The Brown Bullet was a huge success. 29. Stub Wickham looks like he is standing m a hole. 30. Kay Brewer gave Stub Wickham the cob. 31. A female drinking society known as the White Sisters of Scarab is made up mostlv of — . 32. Few people believe any of this is funny. 33 DaveUmbergershoulci be ashamed of himself. 34. We are running out of things to say. 35. There is a possibility that Mark Kannal thinks his puns are refreshing. 36. Gus Rayburn squeezes orange marmalade through his teeth. 37. Sunny Luder imagines himself the hill ' s hottest male. 38. Cora Oliphant is really onl - 41. 39. Clay Reppert has corns on his thumbs from squeezing nickels. 40. There will be mure of this sort of tripe on the next page. U ' ' • ' VA ■TT? A i ' 1 == American Royal Sho Sho n by Leslie Oberlander. Garher. Okie-, who is shown with Dan Arnold. County agent of GarHeld County. Okla Sold by John Clay Co to Williams Meat Co , Kansas City at $71 per cwt., weight 031 lbs. Oberlander also had the grand champion steer in the boys and girls divisions of the 9} American Royal Show, the first time in history that the same boy has won the championship t Ao years in succession Grand Champion Barrow of junior divisions Shown by Rov Freeland. Eftngham, Kansas Sold by John Clay Co at .fih 7 , weight 320 lbs Freeland also won the grand champion- ship with his barrow last year, the first time in the history of the American Royal Show that the same boy has won the championship two years in succession. Three Winners at the 1932 American Royal Live Stock Show. When you have fat stock to sell or want stockers and feeders Cattle - Hogs - Sheep • • deal with • • JOHN CLAY CO. Live Stock Commission KANSAS CITY fXs Rttha W .ntiitsiLr Wdukomjs Okla buU L John C la Co at $20 per c t weight qO lbs to Cudahv Pkg Co Miss Margaret McColm I ' .mpona Kansas el! known 4-H girl who specializes in lamb hand ' ing holding lamb We also have our own completely equipped offices at Chicago, Omaha, St. Joseph, St. Louis, Ft. Worth, Denver, Sioux City, St. Paul, and Ogden. MANHATTAN FRUIT AND VEGETABLE COMPANY Located at FIRST AND POYNTZ We carry a complete line of fresh fruits and vegetables the year round. ' Manhattan, Kansas City Cleaners First Door North of Postoffice Phone 4141 Senile That Satisfies Quality Cleaners 1201 Moro Phone 2321 PHI DELTA THETA IN THEIR childlike attempts to he the smooth hovs of the campus, the Phi Delts are beginning to look like Pilippino house hovs on their night off, with a Taxi-Dancc-Hall- Manner, and a trick method of acting as though thcv were OPEN-FOR-INSPECTION. There aren ' t no flics on these boys! Rush week finds the Phi Delts with half the small town boys in Kansas well in hand. When rush week is over, small town newspapers run the ycarlv head: Local Bo ' Makes Good in a Big ' a ' , and a new pledge is announced. Some of the better known Phi Delts are Tub Smith, 200-pound meatball from down Stockton way. Beer-eyed W ' yatt, Dave Horchem, a blue- blood and a gentleman (yer welcome Dave ' , Sunny Luder, to whom the Phi Delts point with questionable pride, Vic Croskey, and Re. Rankin, who last rushing season was about to go Sigma Nu by choice, so one of the boys wired the hope ' s family . . . asking for help in rushing. The poor, u ' cll-meaning family sent a pleading delegation to their son, who subse- quently went Phi Dclt. Now the Sigma Nu ' s laugh. It cost 49 cents to send the telegram. . h, ha, ha. Mr. Carl Sartorius, and so on. Brother WHO RATES, is the model for all the uncouth Phi Delts when thcv practice trying to be smooth before a mirror every night, but just the same e en if he were a Clark Gable he couldn ' t save the brethern from a wholesale lowering of their social standing when thev started to go out with Chi Omegas. He will graduate before any one of them marries a Chi O and so he will not be forced to murder at the very beginning of his career, the lucky fellow. The house is full of rats and several of the boys have been wounded during a firing spree when it was hard to distinguish between a bro. and a rat, in fact rhe resemblance has startled some of their best visitors, and so they are bidding the male rats and tactfully suggesting all the other sex go Chi O, except two to Kappa, two to Pi Phi, and one to Alpha Xi. Now let ' s get back to where we were. One of the worst known Phi Delts is Ironman Grover. Ironman is the kind of bo ' who likes to go around bulging his muscles at people . He likes Chi Omegas, bottles of Pale, and his own darling wavey hair. People are suspicious of Ironman. He is the one in the phrase, there is one in every fraternity. Kappa Sigma would have liked to have had that boy! PHI SIGMA KAPPA T HE average Phi Sig lets his hair grow, walks with a swing- ing ape-iike motion, and lives on herbs and berries. What ' s more, he smells like a gymnasium. The few gay dogs of the chapter are from the city and represent the fraternity socially on the hill. Mark Kannal, whose cerebral hemispheres are off center, is the chapter pride. He is a guitarist and hence has a natural advantage over the opposite gender. Chi Omega accepts him along with ' eseckv, as a sister and some share their innermost secrets with them. They hitterlv rue this long .iftcrward, however. The Phi Sig beer syndicate thrived throu ghout the vear and went un-odored due to the ingenuity of a practical-minded brother b ' the name of Cavin who diverted the beer fumes up a pipe into the kitchen chimney where the smells mixed. Brothers visiting in the East are surprised to find that a Phi Sig is looked upon as almost a white man, is allo ' ed most ordinary privileges and isn ' t sneered at on the street. His inferiority with respect to most fraternities is not so apparent out there, and he can cnjov himself after he gets over the first surprise. One thing does givt a sigh of relief. It was prettv hard to put a bunch of athletes through school on hashing jobs so they sold Auker down the river to Detroit or something and now they point with pride instead of viewing with alarm. This year they tried a stampede on publications and lost yards on every try. Sometimes they call it Play Sleep and Knit, then sheepishly try to laugh it off, but . . . oh, well. C ta l ' -puO-v V - V L— t Jt o. vw lf euA 6 H A u 4 ' jr fyi -cx c m ' ' if l xA: ' y: Cm E Nj • ) O 3fl In iar, •jj named no Cdn do ' v COV i en L ' U We haN ' e enjoyed your patronage in the Past May we serve you in the Future DIEHL ' HEDGE Furniture Company Manhattan, Kansas Bardwell Bardwell REAL ESTATE— Boufiht, Sold nr Rented. LOANS — Farm and City. INSLTRANCE — Fire, windstorm, automobile, burglary, liability, marine, explosion, rental, commercial travelers, jewelry, furs, plate glass, sports, com- pensation, etc. BONDS — Surety, Fidelity, Contract, Federal, Fraternal Orders, Public Officials, Fraud, Administrators, Guardians, Receivers, Lost Securities. OUR BUSINESS WILL BE APPRECIATED MANHATTAN, KANSAS DELTA DELTA DELTA ' C ' ROM theory to fact it ' s agreed ... if worse goes to worst . . . - ' - Tri Delta. Those self appointed keepers of the morals . . . take an intense interest in psychopathic cases and have a passionate desire for social distinction. For identification purposes . . . they hide in that more holier than thou shell and clothe themselves in that Oh Gawd what pain expression. They give afternoon tea dances . . . where the stag line is sohrietiously sedate and their phis-cd majors pose as fragile . . . disgustingly healthy! ! ! What the world needs are more good hve-ccnt Tri Delts like the dramatic Pryor . . . with her Hare for ohs and ahs . . . who went in for Betas and pero-xide; but they just wouldn ' t mix . . . the boy ' s early home training interfered . . . and made sorta saturated solution. All cool and collected (wonder where some of them were collected) except that bubbling effervescent . . . Patrica Irwin - . . who spends Sunday afternoons in the Rexall telling spicv little stories . . . naughty, naughty, but that gurgling girlish giggle . . . utterly fetching. Achievement . . . oops, my dear! overwhelming Aggie Pop with their voluminous veils, choirish wails, hoopish haloes, and hallowed harps; initiation one hundred per cent strong . . . and when Delta Delta Delta goes strengthv 100 ' , . . . well it ' s just ducks today and feathers tomorrow, and vou can ' t g around it, or them either. And they have lots of things . . . they go motoring, they have two motors, they have Mary Meyers Elliott, they have a scrap book, thev have Eleanor ff ■■• ' sand she dances), and - ' 40. a Ptz. Ave. ACKNOWLEDGMENT BECAUSE the following, without wh constant aid this book would have published with half the trouble, are ever with we are happy, oh, so happv, to dedicate space to: The zilch that wanted to wait until Ma his picture to be taken because he was wa for that Spring tan. The zulch (coined word gents) house mai that sent an unreadable, incomplete and in. rate list of bros. in and wondered why the the proof of their page was wrong. The unshaven stiff who wondered why t. were shadows in his picture. The copy writer that thought we were kidding and held out until he wrote his lo stuff one night. Then he said the stuff was lou It was. The business staff trvoutee who wonder, why the Royal Purple wasn ' t out two week ahead of time so he could whip his issue intc shape. Well, here it is. To the bright person who finds the first mistake when the book appears. To the bright person who finds the second. To the bright person who THE PASSING SHOW I or, reflections from a crockery eye) T TEIGH Ho Te Dum! We ' re here tomorrow and gone todav. Another year has swooshed bv and many memorable things have come to pass. Some of those things have come to a hell of a pass. Some of us have grown another chin. Some of us have had our alcoholic content lessened by the Faculty Council. Some of us will go floundering into the world with a $12.00 sheepskin (Mark Kannal might say, It ' s a cheapskin at any price. ' ). and others of us will merely go floundering into the world. Some of us have curvature of the spine from the constant packing of a slide rule, and others open hooks that squeak like new gates and gaze dully at familiar but unconquerable problems. Enough of the front porch philosophy. We hope that the next school year sees the Hot Stove League swing into the social whirl pool with an open throttle. The H. S. L. (Bell and I-utz) is known for its every morning discussions of what is new in the social malestorm. It is composed of the Aggie- village graybeards, Carl Isaacson, Bell and Lutz, Harry Miller, basketballers, footballers, baseballers, laundry wagon drivers, pants pressers, and poor dressers. Who was drunk and hat was drunk are plopidar topics after parties. Walter Bell, before his marriage, was famous for his renditions of Horatio. Swede Lutz, famous bouncing ball, is known and loved like a brother by all Aggievi • ' hrT.- - - -pnsstics on the ba ro ' ' ' . UPTOWN OR DOWNTOWN KANSAS STATE TRADITION Before and After The Game The Party The Dance Meet Your Friends at The Palace Drug Two Stores 112 S. Fourth 704 N. Manhattan THIRTY-EIGHT YEARS L his Companv has had an unbroken record of EXCELLENCE in the field of Life Insurance for thirty-eight years. KANSAS CITY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 3520 Broadway KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI GDAISELLI C. p. NITRIC ACID C. P. SULPHURIC ACID C. P. HYDROCHLORIC ACID C. P. AMMONIUM HYDROXIDE C. P. GLACIAL ACETIC Strictly Chajikally Pure ( GRASSELLi) THE GRASSELLI CHEMICAL CO. INCORPORATED CLEVELAND OHIO Bic nc ' i ' i III Priiiapal Cities Send Folder SANDWlCn SAOP Delicious Steaks and Variety of Food for Lunch and Dinner ll« li Delightful Sandwiches You will enjoy them After the Party Open All Nighl Geo. Schcu, Pio A 5th and Poxntz PI BETA PHI 1-2-3-4-5-6-7— all the Pi Phis will go to heaven; even the holv few who piously turned rhumbs down on a certain female situation . . . and shut forever in her face the doors of their incubator of purilc snobbery. Ack! but sufficient unto themselves . . . they bask in the dulcet tones of Morsel Mcrritt; and our utterly Modern Murdock, who with the greate.«t o f e. pression can say nerts almost spontaneously . . . and lick pink ice cream cones [ust like a ladv of culture should. Just a sweet quaint bunch . . . who call their coating of shellac, personality . . . and that look of continuous surprise . . . sophistication. Rarely seen in the dav time . . . like our little feathered friend, the owl ... at night, ah, goodness me!!! there ' s that nre escape, those cellar windows, and that well trodden path in the rear of the vicarage. Serenaders have long ago given up their loftv endeavors . . . for there is no one to render appreci- ative applause e.xcepr the house mother . . . the members have just gone out for a night of ribald revelry. While others of more natural charm enjoy themselves with careless abandon, these . . . Arty Arrowers . . . practice the virtues of prospective candidates for the rites of marriage and the duties of motherhood. But they really are nice girls . . . the gentlemen always say May I and they will all go to heaven . . . unless the Cowderv sisters desert their petticoats for passions. ATTENTION GIRLS!! BE IT herehv known that John Elmore Going is as yet unengaged on Saturday Evening January 21, 1933 . ny girl planning an evening without company may make arrange- ment for a most interesting evening hy calling said young gentleman at 3547 between the hours of 8 00 A. M. and 10;00P. M. CO-OP BOOK STORE Text Books and School Supplies The most iiiterest ' iti store i)i town KAPPA SIGMA THIS fraternity (Baird ' s Manual will prove it has done more to promote a feeling of good will among the col- legiate masses than any other Greek organization in e.vistence. Their sterling motto (and many a bosom will bloat with pride as this is read) is The sun never sets on a Kappa Sig. The chapter song is We ' ll Raise Another Glass to the Biggest and has something to do with the Betas. The pledges, from the start, mind you, are instructed to seek their rendition on the parlor harpsicord. Among the notable Kappa Sigs are the Hancks bovs from Wamego. They startled the conservative element of the school by wearing bull-necked sweaters to formal parties. TviO months afterward every fraternity man this side of Fourth Street had a duplicate of the Hancks boys ' garment. But that still doesn ' t prove anything about Kappa Sigs. The boys lost their rushing privileges this year by con- cealing some Phi Sig and Sig Alf prospects in their basement, so they immediately put in a bin full of Johnathans and waited for the trouble to blow over. This saved half the male populace of Centralia from Kappa Sigmaism. ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA A LPHA KAPPA LAMBDA has had some good boys in its - day, but don ' t press us for their names. These boys are proud of their frat and will step up and press your hand and say I ' m an A. K. L. with as much enthusiasm and gusto as any proud unshaven Beta. They realize that they haven ' t got much of a fraternity but are damned proud that they are not Pi K. A. ' s. Most of the boys are either in or are trying out for the college band. They go in strong for intramurals and Alpha Xi Deltas. Alpha Kappa Lambda, we salute vou with a well intended and resounding razzberry. Brrrrrrrrrttt ' s ' l a ' TYPE.3 ' l( olL) ' T e ti: e3So - who hd been rs fle =«o who in is) on 3hou in j (Jfiijoiie dud ev i-i one Vn denfdl C c 3s i)ee (7 o„ fioot-iz CGsf i ' ,s ye r) S f I YOUR. APPEARANCE i5 a factor which is constantly at work, either for you or against you, both in business and in social activities B Be certain of the impression you make with apparel Tom % GRAHAM AND GRAHAM Printers 324 HoustDn Dickinson Theacre Bldj;. Invitations for All Parties Fiiit Dependable Pi hi hi g Sen ice ZETA TAU ALPHA ' ETA TAU, like all boarding clubs, has the problem of • — ' whether eighteen unkissable untouchables are equal to three nuggets. You can take your choice, but the poor girls must have someone to pav the bills. The sisters all say that they are sure irritated at the idea that they arc thought to be stuck up, not too subtly conveying the impression that they ARE stuck up, which is a lie. The are worried, and who wouldn ' t be? With the present aggrega- tion it looks like race suicide will be a very real thing in that sorority chapter. Since Muriel Fulton sold Bob Alexander what he thinks is the real article, there has been a change of opinion on the hill. Even a ZetaTau is capable of being loved. Their usual rush talk is that we take small classes of Zeta Tau caliber. This policy will probably mean the withdrawal of their charter in 1934. SIGMA PHI EPSILON npHlNGS didn ' t look so good for the Sig Eps this vcar. There - - being not much to do the boys began digging up the lawn. After almost one semester the brothers had reached the ten vard mark, which isn ' t bad for a bunch of lugheads. The hoys have a hell of a time keeping up their reputation of being a bunch of athletes. But you have to give them credit for trying. All of the youths when they come in the house are taught how to swagger like a Pi Phi (or should we say stagger like the Kappas do on Saturday night.) and are urged to cultivate hair on their chest and face like an A, G. R. Then they are taken out on the lawn and shown the technique of clling pitcheminthere bov, pitcheminthere bov, at the pitcher. The final result is that every Sig Ep that is turned out of the mill becomes the ElDorado High School boy ' s ideal of a college man. Any day now we expect to drive by the Sig Ep house and see all the cars painted with collegiate remarks, Phoo. Most of their athletes were rather dumb last sem ester and some decided to rest up away from the campus for a time, but all the house hopes is that the Hill will not hnd out that the non athletes (DuMars, Daniels, and yes we can even take in Harter) are even dumber than the burly lads. The Sig Ep motto is as follows: Du Mars was a big shot ' and DuMars is a Sig Ep, therefore all the brothers are big shots Things still don ' t look so good for this gang for the next few years. They haven ' t a single thing to offer the frosh except the beer up in the attic, and that will leak out of those old barrels before rushing in the fall, with Harter and Bessler in town. See Our Store For Scoves and Ranges Spurting Goods Household Goods General Hardware Electric Refrigerators WATERS HARDWARE CO. Manhattan. Kansas I ' «l li;!? :ii,s Poyntz A. R. JACKSON KANSAS CITY SHOW CASE WORKS CO. COMPLETE STORE EQUIPMENT Phone Victor 8837-8838 600 TO 700 East Third Street KANSAi CITY, MO, THETA XI T HESE boys crated away their last load of cantelopes to pay for their picture in the Royal Purple so we have to say something about them. Rumors have it that the boys haven ' t had a pledge in the last four years, but it doesn ' t seem to cramp their style any. They pass long winter evenings having a gatherin ' in the living room at which time they spin yarns and exchange merry quips with each and one another. As you have probabh ' guessed, we don ' t know too much about Theta Xi. k d mixed, and its value increased. The grower s interest in his grain from the time it leaves aches the point of last sale. As a co-operative fits of these operations belong to the grower ver the grain. id control of the marketing machinery gives omplete marketing service. This is achieved operative organization. Co-operative organ- waste and duplication; assures orderly dis- turns to producers the full value of their the grain through an efficient and highly developed co-operative or- ganization, by the most direct _ . Vaulliniat{5 T- ' W m 6 s po 3u Ml- 3 s s a eciu fro., y T e rase s ' ef- j y iy ' ' . ■y ?: ' -- ' y ' f I YOUH APPEARANCE i5 a factor which is constantly at work, either for you or against you, both in business and in social acdvitiesl H Be certain of the impression you make with apparel Tom % l$teveit6on GRAHAM AND GRAHAM Printers 24 Houston Dickinson Theatre Bldg. Invitations for All Parties Fast Dependable Printing Service ZETA TAU ALPHA y ETA TAU, like all boarding clubs, has the problem of • — ' whether eighteen unkissabic untouchables are equal to three nuggets. You can take your choice, but the poor girls must have someone to pay the bills. The sisters all say that they are sure irritated at the idea that they arc thought to be stuck up, not too subtly conveying the impression that they ARE stuck up, which is a lie. Thev are worried, and who wouldn ' t be? With the present aggrega- tion it looks like race suicide will be a very real thing in that sorority chapter. Since Muriel Fulton sold Bob Alexander what he thinks is the real article, there has been a change of opinion on the hill. Even a Zeta Tau is capable of being loved Their usual rush talk is that we take small classes of Zeta Tau caliber. This policy will probably mean the withdrawal of their charter in 1934. SIGMA PHI EPSILON T HINGS didn ' t look so good for the Sig Eps this year. There - ' - being not much to do the boys began digging up the lawn. After almost one semester the brothers had reached the ten vard mark, which isn ' t bad for a bunch of lugheads. The boys have a hell of a time keeping up their reputation of being a bunch of athletes. But you have to give them credit for trying. All of the youths when they come in the house are taught how to swagger like a Pi Phi (or should we say stagger like the Kappas do on Saturday night.) and are urged to cultivate hair on their chest and face like an A. G. R. Then they arc taken out on the lawn and shown the technique of yelling pitcheminthere hoy, pitcheminthere bov, at the pitcher. The final result is that every Sig Ep that is turned out of the mill becomes the ElDorado High School boy ' s ideal of a college man. Any day now we e. pect to drive by the Sig Ep house and see all the cars painted with collegiate remarks Phoo. Most of their athletes were rather dumb last semester and some decided to rest up away from the campus for a time, but all the house hopes is that the Hill will not find out that the non athletes (DuMars, Daniels, and yes we can even take in Harter) are even dumber than the burlv lads. The Sig Ep motto is as follows: Du Mars was a big shot ' and DuMars is a Sig Ep, therefore all the brothers are big shots Things still don ' t look so good for this gang for the next few years. They haven ' t a single thing to offer the frosh except the beer up in the attic, and that will leak out of those old barrels before rushing in the fall, with Harter and Bessler in town. See Our Store For Stoves and Ranges Sporting Goods Household Goods General Hardware Electric Refrigerators WATERS HARDWARE CO. Manhattan. Kansas A. R. JACKSON KANSAS CITY SHOW CASE WORKS CO. COMPLETE STORE EQUIPMENT Phone Victor 8837-8838 600 TO 700 East Third Street KANSAS CITY, MO. THETA XI ' T ' HESE boys crated away their last load of cantelopes to • pay for their picture in the Royal Purple so we have to say something about them. Rumors have it that the boys haven ' t had a pledge in the last four years, but it doesn ' t seem to cramp their style any. They pass long winter evenings having a gatherin ' in the living room at which time they spin yarns and exchange merry quips with each and one another. As you have probably guessed, we don ' t know too much about Theta Xi. as po 3a a - 3s (? a Ado., fr ' J.. She i , £s J f-e. A e Sund . PHI OMEGA PI IF YOU are not a student ... if you are not a social smash . . . then, Gawd bless you i and you ' ll need it) you must be a P. O. P. ... a box supper enthusiast and a campus nonentitv, whose house has become the destiny of driftwood, derelicts, and deadbeats. All the feminine species of pledgeable age (eight to eighty) are pledged . . . e.xcept those who know better . . . who with a deft flutter of the thumb and four fingers . . . uend their way in a fond farewell. Those who are caught in the net of foul circumstances and in a moment of excessive weakness, pledge . . . are placed upon immediate probation . . . thus a ready excuse for not having the necessarv dating ele- ment around. . mong the prized possessions of the house are a radio, modern plumbing, zippers, and Cora Oliphant . . . who sits and mourns the passing of the good old days when women had shapes . . . and men craved more bustle than hustle. Peculiar looking individuals . . . with good intentions and an Oliphant oddit)- . . . but utterlv harmless and zooming toward antiquit ' KAPPA DELTA A MONG the common campus commodities . . . Kappa Delt - . . . still on the rocks . . . and tremulouslv poised on the dizzy brink of social oblivion and scum succombing. Charac- terized by a sweet aroma, merciless matchmaking, and Eliza- beth Jo Kates . . . The Salina Slaybird, of the dilating nostrils and the voice of a tlu ridden cricket. Mo one is allowed to leave the house between the hours of three and four A, M. without a good reason . . . and Alpha Gamma Rho is not a good reason . . . Al Wilson is! ! ! Founded by a triple threat in Farmville, Va. ... it bears traits of the village in which it first rallied . . . but why the stalwart natives let this disease spread remains unknown, unrevenged, unforgettable and irreparable. Fi ve in a R ow • For the past five years Molloy Made covers have been a part of the Royal Purple . . . and a satisfactory part, too, helping to make the Royal Purple a more distinctive volume, a more durable volume and a more attractive volume, • Your cover requirements, no matter what they may be, from a standpoint of color, or grain, or price limitation, can be produced by this organiza- tion, operating a complete cover plant under one roof. Send for informatiaii and samples to — THE DAVID J. MOLLOy PLANT 2857 North Western Avenue Chicago, Illinois DELTA SIGMA PHI DUE to the loss of the old title range the R. O. T. C. is intending to change the oh)ect of its fire to the Delta Sig shack. Such use would make the mansion, hitherto of little value to the community, be of some significance. Their best class is that of ' 37. It is clearly superior, and contains less toads than most Delta Sig classes. In fact, there are abso- lutely no members of the class of ' 37 in the Delta Sig house. Some of these lads do find co-eds at the dormitory who will take their pin. This proves that they, too, have some of the things that most ordinary men take for granted, and that girls will marry them and maybe some day there will be leg- acies who will go Delta Sig just to make interesting news, and make their father feel badh ' . PHI KAPPA TAU THE expressions Phi Kappa Tau and Pete Pocock are synonomous on this campus, Pete being the Mousolini of the local chapter. With Pi Kappa Alpha, Alpha Gamma Rho, and the Epworth League, the Ofganization has a good chance of making the honor roll of W. W. F. B. B. ( World ' s Worst Fraternity Batting Beta), which shows the progress of the fraternity under the Pocock reign. Little can be said, in a surly way, about the boys however, p ossibly because little is known about their daily life and habits. The house and properU ' , located on 17th and Fairchild, can be detected from the typical college atmosphere (see College Humor ' 13) surrounding the exterior of the place. The curb is cluttcted with animated scrap-heaps which belong to the bovs who came to school with the yearn to be Betas. The Pocock drav, a dung- colored Chevrolet, is kept well without the immediate vicinity of the chapter. Pete, we might sneeringly sav, doesn ' t want everybody and his half-brother to know he is a member of what he stoutly declares is a fraternity. TheUnited Power Light Corporation Ihe aiumni wield an uncanny control over the place. The president (in name) is a figure head and sits meekly m on the meetings. The typical Pi K. A. is blond, seedy, and comes front Parsons, Kansas. The colors are beer-stained garnet and dirty gold. The chapter song, coined by Gus Rayburn (if he hacl thought of it first), is Fockele, Your Magic Smell is Everywhere. The chapter boasts of such members as Havden Phillips, pot-gutted Salina play boy, Sid Robin- son (known as Sid the Corny), and Gus Ravburn, notorious Newton no-good. CLOVIA BANDED bits of nondescript humanitv . . . earnestly united in a frantic furthering of mental cleanliness and the Four H ' s hayseed, hopscotch, halitosis, and horticulture. These kitchen kleansers are sublime in the serenity of their noble deeds well done. Thev embody ' the royal ritual of the lodge lovers in the Home Economics Department, health habits, and the Capper ' s Weekly. Farmers, to their mental hemi- spheres are the backbone of the nation . . . bread the staff of life . . . and figures are merely mathe- matical insignias. They are good girls who see their dentist twice a year, have souls instead of sables, and will grow up to be good women who have raised nothing in their lives but cabbages and children. spena toe uraggmg uuuio ui a. uumon ,.,_ .«,. ,.1 in a sanctuary of seclusion, thumbing the musty pages of Is Sex Necessary . . . and striving to put mind above matter. These bold back slappers marked time in one of life ' s rudest ruts . . . until the advent of N ' esecky ' s little sister . . . when the flag once more furled, doorbells were rung . . . and that most odd looking individual known as man . . . (excluding the plumber and the paper hanger) again entered into the house . . . and this time not by mistake. Pledges were no longer retired at eight with tears . . . but went out at nine for beers ... all were happy in the deeplv imbedded illusion that they were desired, adored, and demanded. The illusions remain ... so do they . . . and life goes on just the same. SAVE YOUR CHOICEST LAND USE THE SUCCESS DITCH CHECK Easily set — Easily removed and Reset. Guaranteed to stop the wash and fill ditches Used by Kansas State College in experiment work. Write for Prices The Jetty Mfg. Sales Co. Hiawatha, Kansas ALPHA GAMMA RHO TN AN ofF-hand way we might scummily say that Alpha -1- Gamma Rho does not possess the makings of a fraternity. However it would be folly to announce such a thought with- out knowing any more about an organization than we know- about Alpha, Gamma, and Rho. After several years in the vicinity of Manhattan this editor is unable to tell you even where the local chapter house is located. A good game might be invented to liven up some dull evening by equipping your guests with forked peach branches with which to locate the house. The branch, grasped firmly by the horns, or forks, will turn down when the guest gets warm or within the vicinity of the house. U it is an extra scnsative peach branch it might even turn completely away but probably not unless the guest has cmbibed of several stout brandy-Hips. These boys are SMOOTH GENTS, like billiard balls, although not so useful. We suspect that after every date a girl has with one of these monkeys she retires into the secrecy of her boudoir and has a good cry over the unkindness of fate. The tribe is absolutely under the control of the Munsons and Coberleys which accounts for the fact that they pride them- selves in being better than the Farm House bovs. We ask you, is that a standard TAU KAPPA EPSILON ' T ' HE boys have lost all claim to fame now that Johnson -L is going to graduate, hut they get out every Saturday whis- tling bravely, burnish the old sign, and look forward to taking next year ' s A. T. O. rushees . . . which is the funniest thing we can think of. Actually what they take in and call pledges are a bunch of small town racing drivers. But they are under the illusion that the people they take in are human beings. They ' re happy in their own queer little way, so why take joy away from them? CHI OMEGA C PORTING blood in these Chi Omegas . . . receivers and part ' -- ' owners of the Hotel Wareham and the Spanish Village whose purity rivals that of the waters of a sand pit in mid August. Purcell and Haskell . . . retired to the city . . . Yes-you- bet-Kahl, the Texas Longhorn, went into smug seclusion . . . leaving the organization nothing to apologize for . . . except a few pleasure-bent pledges, who came to the front, but nothing was quiet. The closer you watched the less you saw . . . and they really went in for iniquity instead of intellect. These little rascals are all the same . . . which would be a great thing if any of them were half way conscious ... but as is . . . they ate darned annoying and a downright nuisance. They bubble over with surface emotion and that Chi Omega sense of humor, Phoo ' They play pig in the palace and post- office in the Park. Their sneak ran the gamut frgm distinction to distraction. Last year ' s social hi-light, Well Built Graham ... a bundle of abundant animation . . . went in for trios and triangles ... she just wouldn ' t say yes and she couldn ' t say no. Whizzer Jacks ... the mastermind . . . with her four word sentences . . . took up kindergarten work and Joe Murphy, which reflects the intellect of the organization perfectly. Thelastof their Busts was the Founder ' s Day Banquet in K. C. Ghastly sights: beringed orbs ' , shaking limbs, ghoulish glances, and sallow souls . . . when came the conclusion of the Flounder ' s Day Banquet and the introduction of the decimal beverages. But these little rascals have h.id lots of experience ... and it in ' t for nothing that rhey know: that fire escapes have nothing to do with fires . . . Osborn is a sound sleeper ... Phi Delts just will talk . . . and no one has more good clean fun than a Chi Omega. Phoo! THE PASSING SHOW (continued from page 306) pi KAPPA CHI, notorious dancing organization, was rubbed -•- out of existence this vear for more reasons than three. The three greatest reasons were the ingredients, Pi Phi. Kappa, and Chi Omega but we ' ve got our own special little hunch that the fourth reason was the greatest-party-of-the-year held at the country club early in the year. Praise be to Allah that parties like that are not once-a-monthers. On a bleak Friday evening in November, ' 32, the good people of Wamego assem- bled in their cupolas to discuss the great hue and cry which seemed to come from the city of Manhattan. Aproned matrons and village graybeards shook their heads in common mis- understanding. Little did the good people know that Pi Kappa Chi was throwing its annual rub at the country club. Aggic- ville ' s cloak and suit vendors supplied much of the entertain- ment and everybody had an evening of good, clean, whole- some fun, much to the chagrin of the management. Walter Bell, not to be outdone by the youngsters, worked the chill out of his hones on his Horatio number, and when Walt does Horatio you can bet your prize shoat that it is a good party. The neatest trick of the year was the sudden turn of affairs in the Betty Co-ed election. Eugenia Ebling, very boney Pi Phi and Collegian columnist (you may hiss roundly), and former Betty Co-ed, hot-aired her views about the sappiness of such an election. Evidently this sob-sister (tsk! The jealousy of womanhood) didn ' t want any competition until she got out of school. Anyway, certain jokesters put her name up for the title and by Gad she won it! Eugenia crawfished. She thanked her public and still thinks she deserved the title. Well, we ' ve all got a right to our own opinion. The greatest exhibition of high-schoolery of the vear was the moronic exhibition the engineers gave in trying to crash the Ag Barnwarmer. Soon after Luella Graham, Steve Vesesky ' s choice for the queenship, ascended to the throne (we still think it a nice bit of politics Steven V), the row began. The agrarians disposed of the smaller fry by running thcm ' through a paddle line hut all hell broke loose in due time and the engineers stormed the north door, the south door, and the clothes chutes. The ags gathered and massaged the skulls of the intruders. In fact they exchanged skull massage for skull massage for several minutes. Severed ears and front teeth were strewn on the floor. Connective tissues had to be scraped from che woodwork with putty knives. Aye, THERE was a tussle for vou! On April 7, 1933, beer returned to the border, 125 concrete miles to the east. The starting gun snapped and fifty Chi Omegas nearly strained their G-strings getting to the city for a quaff of the new ale. The younger generation, being used to bottles of thumbed Pale, thought the new brew was so much hog wash. The last and worst of the year ' s parties was sponsored by the wearers of the coveted beetle, namely the time famed Scarab organization. Even before the affair was okehed by the organization, the Social Committee was arguing as to whether or not they should send three or five cops to the function. (They actually sent five hut only three arrived). The music was furnished by Lee Morgan ' s Emporia Red Hats. The band, not being drunk, was the only redeeming feature of the evening, with their rendition of Harry Hasler ' s theme song, Baa, Baa Black Goats Have Yon Any Wool? Yes Sir, Yes Sir, Arm Pitts Full The partv closed with the rendition of Scarabs theme song Pass Out Lightly. Twenty members and the alumni of the organization were hosts of the occasion, and they all found out later that a good time was had by all. Pagt ttS INDEX Administration, The Ag Barnwarmer Agricultural Association. Agricultural Economics Club. Agricultural Student Alpha Kappa Psi Alpha Zeta Alumni Association A.S. C. E. Athletic Director. Coaching Staff Collegian Board Collegian Staff Collegiate 4-H Club Corsaut, Coach Charles Cosmopolitan Club Crops Judging Team . . . . 22-29 . . 257 ,..257 ...212 . . .258 ...218 . . 210 ..32 . . 214 Athletic Council Baseball 94-98 Basketball ' -87 Beauty Queens ■■•■■■243-247 Block and Bridle Club ;.■..... 13 Browning Literary Society °5 .253 .253 .211 84 .256 .260 H Hamilton Literary Society • 206 Home Economics Meats Judging Team ...... j. ..■...:..•.. 259 Honorary Cadet Officers ..-..... 270 I Intersociety Council 204 Intramural Athletics 102-104 Ionian Literary Society. . . .■. ' ...■. . . . .... . .. ' . ' .. ' . ,:.,!. ' 206 J . . Judging Teams Crops Judging ■• ■260 Home Economics Meats Judging 259 Livestock Judging 258 Men ' s Meat Judging 259 Poultry Judging 260 K Fraternity, Women ' s 108 Kansas State Engineer 254 Kansas State Sweetheart • • •. 248 Kappa Beta 5 Kappa Phi • - 226 Klod and Kernel Klub 213 Literary Societies .205 Dynamis . Browning Franklin 205 Hamilton 06 Ionian 206 Livestock Judging Team 258 Enchiladas ■: 200 Engineering Association ■• • ; 262 Footba 76-82 Franklin Literary Society 205 Fraternities • 130-173 Acacia ■• 130-131 Alpha Gamma Rho • . • 132-133 Alpha Kappa Lambda 134-135 Alpha Rho Chi 136-137 Alpha Tau Omega 138-139 BetaThetaPi • 1 0-141 Delta Sigma Phi 142-143 Delta Tau Delta 1 4-145 Farm House 146-147 Kappa Sigma 148-149 Lambda Chi Alpha 150-151 Phi Delta Theta 152-153 Phi Kappa 154-155 Phi Kappa Tau ■156-157 Phi Lambda Theta 158-159 Phi Sigma Kappa .... ' .... ' .. ' ... 160-161 Pi Kappa Alpha 162-163 Sigma Alpha Epsilon . 164-165 Sigma Nu 166-167 Sigma Phi Epsilon... 168-169 Tau Kappa Epsilon 170-171 Theta Xi ' 72-173 Friars M ' . Margaret Justin Home Economics Club f61 March, Fredric ■• 242 Men ' s Meat Judging Team ■259 Military Department . ' ■, ■268-269 Minor Sports .: 100-101 Mortar and Ball 272 Mortar Board 263 N Newman Club. . . ' 227 Omicron Nu . Orchesis. . . . .221 .228 Panhellenic, Freshman Men ' s 12 ' Panhellenic, Freshman Women ' s l ' ' Panhellenic, Senior Men ' s Panhellenic, Senior Women ' s Pax. Phi Alpha Mu Phi Kappa Phi Phi Lambda Upsilon . . Pi Epsilon Pi Poultry Judging Team . Prix .126 .176 .129 .219 .222 .212 .220 .260 .263 .266 Publicity and Radio. Purple Pepstcrs ..31 .108 INDEX (Continued) R Radio , _ -52 Royal Purple Board 252 Roval Purple Staff 250-251 S Scabbard and Blade .- 271 Scarab 228 Senior Class 34-54 Sigma Tau 216-217 Sororities 178-199 Alpha Delta Pi 178-179 Alpha Xi Delta 180-181 Beta Phi Alpha 182-183 Chi Omega , 184-185 Cl° i 186-187 Delta Delta Delta .- 188-189 Kappa Delta 190-191 Kappa Kappa Gamma I92-193 Phi Omega Pi 194-195 P ' Beta Phi 296-197 Zeta Tau Alpha 198-199 Steel Ring 215 Student Council ig T ■rh«aPi 226 Theta Sigma Phi 220 ' ' ' - . , .90-92 U Underclass section 56-60 V Van Zile Hall 01 Veterinary Medicine groups 264-265 W Wampus Cats •,-,« Wise Club ,27 Women ' s Athletic Association 2O6 Women ' s Athletic Association Council 107 Women ' s Athletic features 109-112 Women ' s K Fraternitv jgo Y Y- ' C-A 224 ADVERTISERS ' INDEX A Aggie Hardware and Electric Co 298 Aladdin Hotel ,qq Art Craft Printers 299 Associated Banks of Manhattan 299 B Bardwell and Bardwell ,0,- Boone Hotel Company 295 Browne Studio 29-( Burlington Venetian Blind Co 32g C Capper Engraving Co 3I4 City Cleaners 2qs Coles Department Stores tqc College Book Store 291 Co-Op Book Store -igQ Cotrcll and Leonard -,0, D Diehl-Hcdge Furniture Co -ig,- E Elite Cleaners ,g, F Farmers ' National Grain Corp 312- ' 5n G Graham Graham Printers -120 Grasselli Chemical Company ig-, L H. D. Lee Mercantile Co 294 J Jetty Manufacturing Co ; •125 John Clay and Co ;.-.,. 297 John Deere Plow Co ; 325 June Layton g, K Kansas City Life Insurance Co igy Kansas City Showcase -120 Kansas Power and Light 792 M Manhattan Fruit and Vegetable Co 298 Mollov, David J, Plant 314 P Palace Drug Companv 3gg S Scheu ' s Sandwich Shop igg S. K. Smith Company 3] Stevenson ' s -ijg Studio Royal 30 U United Power and Light Co 325 W Wareham Ballroom 3g2 Waters Hardware Co 32g I
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.